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The Choir of Royal Holloway, Rupert Gough, The English Cornett, Sackbut Ensemble - Peter Philips: Cantiones sacrae octonis vocibus - 8-Part Motets (2013) [Hi-Res]

The Choir of Royal Holloway, Rupert Gough, The English Cornett, Sackbut Ensemble - Peter Philips: Cantiones sacrae octonis vocibus - 8-Part Motets (2013) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Peter Philips: Cantiones sacrae octonis vocibus - 8-Part Motets
  • Year Of Release: 2024
  • Label: Hyperion
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 88.2kHz +Booklet
  • Total Time: 01:11:58
  • Total Size: 327 mb / 1.16 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Benedictus Deus noster
02. O quam suavis est a 8 (II)
03. Jubilate Deo omnis terra
04. Benedictus Dominus
05. Veni Sancte Spiritus
06. Beati estis
07. Ecce panis Angelorum a 8
08. Salve Regina
09. Regina caeli a 8
10. Panis sancte, panis vive
11. Caecilia virgo
12. Veni Sancte Spiritus
13. Gaudens gaudebo
14. Beata Dei genitrix a 8
15. Alma redemptoris mater a 8
16. Hodie nobis de caelo

Peter Philips was an English composer who spent his career outside of England: he traveled to Italy, where he absorbed both the pure Counter Reformation style of Palestrina and, apparently, the polychoral style of Venice. By the time he planned to return, the situation of English Catholics was dire, so he fled to the Low Countries and apparently spent the rest of his life there, harassed occasionally by English agents but managing, in Dutch, to talk his way out of trouble. He has never fit neatly into the categories of music history, and he is known mostly for keyboard music. These eight-part motets of 1613, separated from the mainstream of musical and liturgical history, are not often performed, and their mere presence is really the main attraction here. They lie right in between Philips' Italian models, with the sober, text-centered approach of Palestrina applied to a variety of big antiphonal structures. These in turn are treated with great variety here by conductor Rupert Gough and the Choir of Royal Holloway (Royal Holloway is one of the colleges of the University of London), including the use of cornetts and sackbuts on some pieces. Here the musicians rely on evidence from Dutch images of the period, and the realization is really quite nice, with a spacious sound that drowns out neither the choir nor the instruments. There are cleaner choirs than the young Choir of Royal Holloway, but few that seem to enter so instinctively into the spirit of the music. The engineers, working in London's St. Alban's church, have done a fine job in difficult circumstances, and this is all around an interesting offbeat find for devotees of English polyphony.


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