A Renaissance Christmas

Program: #14-52   Air Date: Dec 22, 2014

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From the solemnity of Thomas Tallis, to rare first-time recordings of composers famous and obscure, to early 17th century Bohemia, we will celebrate the Feast with our 35th annual Christmas show.

NOTE: All of the releases on this program are from recent recordings of material for Christmastide.

I. Tallis: Missa Puer nobis est natus (The Cardinall’s Musick/Andrew Carwood). Hyperion CD CDA 68026.

Tallis: Missa Puer natus est nobis

Gramophone Record of the Year-winning group The Cardinall’s Musick continues its exploration of Tallis’s sacred music. These recordings not only showcase the greatest repertoire of the English Renaissance in dazzling performances, but also illustrate the complex historical and political background of the works and their genesis.

This volume presents Tallis’s extraordinary seven-voice Mass, Missa Puer natus est nobis, which dates from the Catholic reign of Mary I. In his fascinating booklet notes Andrew Carwood writes that this Mass is ‘something of a marriage between the English and Spanish Chapels, not only in its scoring but also in its sound world … the piece is sonorous and rich, a gorgeous background tapestry for a solemn celebration of the Mass, and has wonderful dramatic effects including the use of antiphony or dialogue between voices. It is a shame that Tallis wrote no more in this vein but, perhaps like Mary’s short-lived Restoration, it was a piece of the moment not to be repeated’.

Other works recorded here include what is possibly Tallis’s earliest work, the four-part Latin Magnificat, and the gloriously splendid Videte miraculum, a masterpiece with a ‘rich palette of colours, enhanced by suave melodic writing with a slow-moving harmonic pulse tinged with heart-achingly gorgeous cadences’.

TALLIS: Missa Puer natus est nobis
Salvator mundi, Domine
Puer natus est nobia (chant)
Quod chorus vatum
Benedictus;
Magnificat a 4
Audivi vocem de caelo
Videte miraculum

 

II. Folger Consort: Christmas in New Spain (Folger Consort/Cathedra Ensemble). Bard CD. For more information: http://www.folger.edu/

 

Christmas in New Spain by Folger Consort (2014-05-04)

This live recording, drawn from concerts performed at the Folger Shakespeare Library in December of 2013, consists of music heard in the New World from the late 16th to the 18th centuries. The composers represented, most of whom were originally from Spain and Portugal but then worked in Guatemala, Peru, and Mexico, drew on many sources for their various musical styles, including the lively rhythms of Iberian folk music, the newest European styles, indigenous American practices, and even African influences

By 1600 there were European-style cities in Mexico and Peru, the most important parts of Spain’s colonial empire. Elaborate musical establishments were formed at the major cathedrals of Mexico City, Puebla, Lima, and Cuzco. Puebla Cathedral, as ornate as many in Europe, is a good example of the larger musical organizations of New Spain. Accounts document how readily Native Americans took to Spanish church music.

Many of them became proficient singers of Gregorian chant and polyphony, of Gregorian chant and polyphony, and they were skilled in the construction and playing of European instruments. The Cathedral Cappella by 1650 consisted of 13 adult singers and as many boys. All but two of the men were also paid to double on various instruments. Apparently, Mexican bishops had no qualms about the use of harps, viols, shawms, trombones, and other instruments in church. We open and close this recording with sacred pieces composed for these cathedrals. In between we have instrumental music, often based on the work of two Spanish guitarists with links to the New World. Many New World churches did not have organs, so the fundamental harmonies of 17th-century music were often provided by harps and other instruments. Harp, guitar, and violins were prominent, and we appropriately add flutes, viols, dulcian, and lots of percussion. There are also Christmas villançicos–much less formal pieces that often use Native American and black/Spanish dialects. They are quite different from anything being composed back in Spain.

The rest of our music comes from a source known as the Trujillo del Peru Codex, compiled by a late 18th-century bishop of Trujillo, Peru. This manuscript contains over 1400 beautifully primitive watercolors depicting the lives of local people and also 20 remarkable pieces of music, in a decidedly non-European style. (View the manuscript online at [1].) These pieces demonstrate that very early in the colonial period European traditions and American and African influences were joined and forming a truly American a truly American musical style. – Robert Eisenstein

1. Exultate justi in Domino, Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla 
2. Folias Gallegas, Santiago de Murcia 
2. Cumbees; Canarios, Murcia 
4. Improvisations on Zarambeques and Mariones, after Lucas Ruiz de Ribayaz 
5. Por celebrar del Infante, Juan de Araujo 
6. Dennos lecencia señores, Trujillo del Peru Codex 
7. Niño il mijor que y logrado, Trujillo del Peru 
8. Bayle del Chimo, Trujillo del Peru 
9. Bayle de danzantes con pifano y tomboril, Trujillo del Peru 
10. Lanchas para baylar, Trujillo del Peru 
11. Xicochi conetzintle, Gaspar Fernandes 
12. Las coflades de la estleya, Araujo 
13. Guarda la fiera, Antonio Salazar 
14. Ay, Galagueños, Fabian Ximeno 
15. Folias, Anonymous 
16. Tañe gil u tamborino, Fernandes 
17. Eso rigor e repente, Fernandes 
18. Españoletas, Ribayaz 
19. Tonada donosa, Trujillo del Peru 
20. Gloria, Padilla

  

III. Narození Pána Krista-- Teares of the Muses—Christmas Music in 17th Century Bohemia (The Teares of the Muses/ghostlight Vocal Qt./Kathleen Cantrell, s./Margaret Panofsky, dir.). For more information: http://www.tearesofthemuses.com/

Narozeni Pana Krista: Christmas Music 17th-Century by Teares of the Muses (2013-05-04)

The CD’s featured works—most of them recorded here for the first time—are by the marvelous, rarely heard Adam Michna. Other Bohemian composers include Capricornus, Funck, Rovenský and Jan Josef Bozan. From the first track to the last, the vocal music explores the most cheerful portion of the church year—Advent and Christmas—with interspersed viol consort pieces.

 

The music is a half-century before J. S. Bach; and it brings to life works from 17th century Bohemia across a range of moods and both courtly and popular forms. An opening Mass and a Sonata, and in the middle a dance-music Suite, are complemented by sweet carols that then alternate with religious pieces, an Alma redemptoris Mater, an Adesto multitudo coelestis exercitus, and a Magnificat. The CD was recorded at the St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, NYC.

 

Detailed notes explain musical contexts and who the composers were: Adam Vacláv Michna, Johann Michael Nicolai, Michael Praetorius, Samuel Capricornus, Vacláv Karel Rovensky, and David Funck (who wrote “delicate baroque dances that could have been played at a court ball or banquet” but who was—you’d never know it from the music—“unstable and dissolute”; he was “forced to flee from a girls’ school in Upper Franconia where he worked, and was found dead shortly thereafter”).

 

This is the product of collaboration, between The Teares of the Muses (The New York University Collegium Viol Consort), soprano Kathleen Cantrell, and the Ghostlight Vocal Quartet. Teares of the Muses’s Director Margaret Panofsky played first treble viol and first bass viol, directing from the chair; Collegium musicians are Caroline Marris and Christina Brandt-Young (treble viol and bass viol), Jeremy Brandt-Young and Carlene Stober (bass viol); and John Cantrell (organ and percussion). Panofsky selected the music, provided the notes, and did considerable musicological research to ensure authenticity but also applied some creative interpretation to the carols. Panofsky wrote and performed the treble variations for the various pieces.

 

The timbre is soft and sweet, but serious and soulful; and richly resonant, from being performed at St. Michael’s. Cantrell's voice is very special, catching just the feeling of the old music, and I like how the Ghostlight Vocal Quartet harmonizes with her sound. The treble viol playing on the first two carols, by Michna, is gorgeous; the treble viol's voice and Cantrell’s voice merge and then play off wonderfully. Same for the three later Michna Christmas Carols. The first of them, "Zvani...," has a perky plucking motif and a sort of cheerfulness. The one next after is nicely cheerful too, yet mellow. The viol playing is sublime, rings out just right; the music between second and third stanzas is a nice little surprise for the listener.

 

The pieces are all rich and intricate. Across them all, however, what I did not quite hear is "joy"—even in “In Dulce Jubilo,’ which is more “dulce” than “jubilant.” This is not a criticism, it is praise of how true the performance is to the music! Especially Baroque religious music carries forward a medieval attitude about religion: that religion is serious, and life is a prison. Even Christmas music is never just-plain-happy. (Besides, wasn’t the “happy Christmas” idea invented in the nineteenth century?)

 

The Funck Suite in A Minor feels elemental, as it moves from walking to running and then dancing; and you can hear the intention of it being happy, and the little Ballo ends it sweetly! The Capricornus is a good piece to show off; the CD’s notes say the choice to combine treble viol and soprano is anachronistic, but it works very well in how the singing and viol play off each other; I like this piece a lot. Also the Rovensky arrangement, with the repeated bouncy little same notes, is tonally thoughtful and sweet, and the viol just sings in the slow part near the end. Michna's Magnificat is simple but rich (and it is nice for Cantrell to be able to relax from Czech into Latin); Cantrell and the Ghostlight team are very good together here. The final three carols close the whole in a lively brio, as joyful as it seems possible to make this music be. My favorite is the last—it dances, the viols are singing, the poem is witty as well as sweet, and the composer has caught the somewhat sassy spirit of the words as well as a happy cheerfulness that might, for the end, be called joy!

 

Reviewed by Rich Jacobs

IV. In terra pax—Renaissance Music for Advent and Christmas (The Suspicious Cheese Lords). SCL CD-504. For more information: http://suspiciouscheeselords.com/music/

In Terra Pax by The Suspicious Cheese Lords
 

In Terra Pax is the Cheese Lords' fourth CD. It was recorded at the Franciscan Monastery in Washington, D.C., and produced by Tina Chancey of Hesperus. This is the first Cheese Lord CD not to focus on work of a single composer.

This recording features many previously unrecorded pieces, including works by Jacob Handl, Leonard Paminger, Thomas Crecquillon, Gregorio Turini, and others. A highlight of the CD is the first-ever recording of Palestrina's Missa O admirabile commercium.

Hodie Christus natus est - Gregorio Turini (c 1553-5–1596)
In dulci jubilo - Leonhard Paminger (1495–1567)
Alma Redemptoris Mater - Elzéar Genet (c 1470–1548)
O magnum mysterium - Ivo de Vento (c 1543-5–1575)
Verbum caro factum est - Thomas Crecquillon (c 1505-15–1557)
Ave Maria - Dominique Phinot (c 1510–c 1556)
Christus natus est nobis - Melchor Robledo (c 1510–1586)
O admirabile commercium a 5 - Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c 1525–1594)
Missa O admirabile commercium - Palestrina
Laetabundus - Chant Sequence for Christmas
Hodie Christus natus est - Georg Prenner (c 1517–1590)
Utinam dirumperes coelos - Jacob Handl (1550–1591)
There is no rose - 15th century English
Hodie Christus natus est - Giovanni Maria Nanino (c 1543-4–1607)
Stella quam viderant magi - Jacob Handl (1550–1591)
Noe, noe, noe a 5 - Francesco de Layolle (1492–c 1540)

 

Composer Info

Fabian Ximeno, Antonio Salazar, Gaspar Fernandes, Trujillo del Peru Codex, Juan de Araujo, Lucas Ruiz de Ribayaz, Santiago de Murcia, Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla, David Funck, Adam Vacláv Michna, Johann Michael Nicolai, Michael Praetorius, Samuel Capricornus, Vacláv Karel Rovensky, Francesco de Layolle (1492–c 1540), Giovanni Maria Nanino (c 1543-4–1607), Jacob Handl (1550–1591), Georg Prenner (c 1517–1590), Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c 1525–1594), Melchor Robledo (c 1510–1586), Dominique Phinot (c 1510–c 1556), Thomas Crecquillon (c 1505-15–1557), Ivo de Vento (c 1543-5–1575), Elzéar Genet (c 1470–1548), Gregorio Turini (c 1553-5–1596), Leonhard Paminger (1495–1567), Thomas Tallis

CD Info

Bard CD, Hyperion CD CDA 68026, SCL CD-504,