Byrd: The Great Service - download (MP3 & FLAC)

This page lists our only recording of The Great Service, by William Byrd (1543-1623) on download (MP3 & FLAC).

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Byrd: The Great Service

Label:

Chandos

Catalogue No:

CHAN0789

Series:

Chaconne

Discs:

1

Release date:

28th May 2012

Barcode:

0095115078921

Length:

67 minutes

Medium:

CD (download also available)
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Byrd: The Great Service


Steven Devine (organ)

The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble & Musica Contexta

CD

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Musica Contexta translates literally as ‘music interwoven’, reflecting the group’s primary aim of presenting Renaissance music in the context of its original conception and function. They are joined on this recording by The English Cornett and Sackbut Ensemble and the harpsichordist Steven Devine.

The Great Service, consisting of settings of liturgical texts for Matins, Communion, and Evensong, is among the finest music by William Byrd for the Anglican Church. He wrote this grand-scale work for two five-part choirs who, for added contrast, would sing their respective parts facing each other from either side of the church. The size of the choir was used not so much for volume or declamatory effect, as for an extraordinarily rich variety of vocal textures and sonorities.

As well as constantly changing the combination of voices, Byrd was exceptionally inventive in countless other ways, for example by varying the phrase lengths and rhythms, by throwing in unexpected harmonies, and by repeating lines in ever more elaborate ways. The endless variety with which Byrd played with the available combinations gives the Great Service a kaleidoscopic character, which is very rare in late Renaissance music.

The Great Service is a prime example of how the written music only partially plots a Renaissance composer’s intentions for interpreters of today. It is the nature of Renaissance music, as it was written, deliberately to encourage different approaches. In the words of Simon Ravens, the Music Director of Musica Contexta: ‘That which we might consider frustratingly vague, they thought of as an open embrace of the broadest possible church of performers.’

He continues: ‘And although our performance resonates with thoughts of the Chapel Royal, we have not attempted to tie this recording, taken as a whole, to any particular occasion or place: the evidence for us to reconstruct any such event simply does not exist.’ It has been suggested, however, that the whole work may have been written for the fortieth anniversary in 1598 of Queen Elizabeth’s accession.

William Byrd: Gradualia, Book 2 (arr. for brass ensemble)

playConstitues eos

William Byrd: The Great Service

playVenite

William Byrd: Second Preces and Psalms

playSecond Preces and Psalms: Psalm 114: When Israel came out of Egypt

The Great Service

playTe Deum

playBenedictus

William Byrd: Sing Joyfully unto God Our Strength

playSing Joyfully unto God Our Strength

Gradualia, Book 2 (arr. for brass ensemble)

playNunc scio vere

The Great Service

playKyrie

William Byrd: Prelude in C major

playPrelude in C major

The Great Service

playCreed

Gradualia, Book 2 (arr. for brass ensemble)

playHodie Simon Petrus

William Byrd: First Preces and Psalms

playFirst Preces and Psalms: Psalm 47: O clap your hands together, all ye people

The Great Service

playMagnificat

William Byrd: Verse in C major

playVerse in C major

The Great Service

playNunc dimittis

William Byrd: O Lord, make thy servant Elizabeth the Queen

playO Lord, make thy servant Elizabeth the Queen

The Guardian

21st June 2012

***

“It's a fascinating piece of musical conjecture, even if the textures sometimes seem a little too overripe.”

Gramophone Magazine

September 2012

“One of the selling points is the use of cornetts and sackbuts to double the voices in the 'full' sections...In fact the presence of the instruments means that there is a sameness about the sound: splendid in its way, but undifferentiated...The other selling point is the use of Elizabethan pronunciation. An interesting experiement on both counts.”

BBC Music Magazine

September 2012

***

“This is a Great Service of great innovation, but one which lacks the vocal and technical consistency of established Byrd interpretations.”

The Independent on Sunday

2nd September 2012

“Ravens creates an imagined reconstruction of its performance [at the Chapel Royal]. The result has an almost Iberian flavour but the sense of ceremony, decoration and wealth is powerfully conveyed.”

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