Music for Henry V & the House of Lancaster: The English cyclic Mass Quem malignus spiritus and ceremonial motets for fifteenth-century princely chapel

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Music for Henry V & the House of Lancaster: The English cyclic Mass Quem malignus spiritus and ceremonial motets for fifteenth-century princely chapel
The Binchois Consort / Andrew Kirkman, conductor

[ Hyperion / CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 20 September 2011

This item is only available to us via Special Import.

"It would be difficult to imagine more tuneful, exacting interpretations of some of these compositions...this is an adventurous disc which provides a fascinating glimpse into the kind of soundscape that must have greeted Henry V on his return from Agincourt"
(BBC Music Magazine: Choral & Song Choice - October 2011)

BBC Music Magazine: Choral & Song Choice - October 2011

"This repertoire testifies to the haunting purity of music from the early 15th century...The Binchois Consort under Andrew Kirkman performs with discreet, moving expressiveness." (Daily Telegraph)

"It's subtle, beautiful stuff and no one would doubt its spiritual sincerity...One piece, a setting of the Gloria, is ascribed to "Roy Henry", reckoned to be the king himself; he was quite a composer, if this is anything to go by. The performances are faultless."
(Guardian)

"The all-male Binchois Consort sing the bellicose king's gruff polyphony with appropriately hard, but not unpleasant tone. They sound fresh off the battlefield...The low tenors peal out the cantus firmus of the mass while eunuchy altos and high tenors weave extended intricate lines over it in phrases arched like an arrow shower...This is an enlightened disc covering an unexplored repertoire."
(Classic FM)

"The is a magical and moving chance to hear music directly from the circle of Henry V and his son Henry VI...It would be difficult to imagine more tuneful, exacting interpretations of some of these compositions...this is an adventurous disc which provides a fascinating glimpse into the kind of soundscape that must have greeted Henry V on his return from Agincourt."
(BBC Music)

"All these works, with their endless rhythmic and melodic variety and dense counterpoint, present considerable challenges in performance...All in all, I think this is The Binchois Consort's best recording yet."
(International Record Review)

The Binchois Consort presents a disc which demonstrates the beauty and grandeur of the music performed daily in princely chapels of fifteenth-century England. It illustrates the sheer variety of types of singing, some of it virtuosic in its brilliance. Specifically it offers sacred ceremonial pieces written either for Henry V himself, as King, or to invoke the saintly patron of the House of Lancaster, John of Bridlington, as well as a selection of intricate motets.

Scholarly notes by Philip Weller place this music firmly in its historical context, and the Binchois performances represent the highest standard of early music singing of the present day. Every nuance is considered and each phrase is relished in this immaculately polished disc.

Tracks:

Cooke, John:
Alma proles

Damett:
Salvatoris mater / O Georgi Deo care

Frye:
Ave regina coelorum

Henry V:
Gloria

Power, L:
Ave regina cælorum

Gloriose virginis

Sturgeon:
Salve mater Domini / Salve templum Domini

anon.:
The Office for St John of Bridlington
Asperges me, Domine
Missa Quem malignus spiritus
Ave regina caelorum
Gloriosae virginis
Ite missa est - Agimus tibi gratias
Tota pulchra es