'Surely definitive and a triumph for all concerned … The quality of the interpretation flows flawlessly throughout the series … Probably the most significant issue I have yet reviewed. There are so many glorious details in his playing that it is hard to know where to begin in its praise' (Gramophone)
'The production values beggar description. Absolutely stunning. A landmark release as musically eloquent as it is scholastically fastidious' (Classic CD)
'In his 100-page essay on William Byrd, Moroney argues forcefully that the 56 pavans and galliards deserve to be ranked with the 48 preludes and fugues of Bach and the 32 sonatas of Beethoven. And on the strength of his superb playing of a rich array of contrasting instruments, the case for Byrd as one of the great keyboard composers is more than justified: the extraordinary spectrum of influences from which the Elizabethan composer took his inspiration suggests a genius as versatile as the great baroque and classical masters. This marvellous set - recorded painstakingly over six years and only now released as an integral edition - provides invaluable insight into this relatively neglected aspect of Byrd's prolific output. Moroney is as convincing on the organ - using 17th-century instruments or copies, but without the pedals that Byrd would not have known - as he is on the harpsichord, clavicord and virginals. A monument in the history of early-music recording.' (The Sunday Times)
'This is a truly landmark recording' (The New Statesman)
'If you have any interest at all in Byrd, keyboard music, English culture, or, indeed, music of any sort, buy this set' (Early Music Review)
'In 25 years of reviewing I haven't come across anything of such importance, substance and consistent musicianship' (BBC CD Review)
'Affectionate, stylish, catchy, sophisticated and virtuosic, a feast of a lifetime' (Classic fM Magazine)
'Endless dipping-in delights' (Birmingham Post)
'A triumph. Surely the definitive account for the foreseeable future' (BBC Music Magazine)
'One of the great monuments of recording in recent years, an issue that demands a place in every Byrd collection' (Goldberg)
CD1
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CD2
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Movement 1: Pavin
[5'17]
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Movement 2: The Galliard
[1'47]
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Movement 1: Pavin
[4'51]
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Movement 2: Galliard
[1'53]
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Movement 1: Paven
[4'17]
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Movement 2: The Galliard
[1'59]
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CD3
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CD4
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CD5
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Movement 1: Paven
[8'47]
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Movement 2: Galliard
[4'34]
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Movement 1: Pavana
[4'42]
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Movement 2: Galiarda
[1'33]
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Movement 1: Pavana
[5'04]
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Movement 2: Galliarda
[1'47]
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CD6
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Movement 1: Pavian
[2'57]
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Movement 2: Galliarde
[1'45]
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Movement 1: Pavian
[2'50]
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Movement 2: Galliarde
[1'49]
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Movement 1: Pavana
[4'49]
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Movement 2: Galliarde
[1'44]
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Movement 1: Pavian
[6'31]
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Movement 2: Galliarde
[5'19]
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CD7
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Movement 1: Pavana
[4'30]
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Movement 2: Galiardo
[2'13]
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Movement 1: Paven
[1'59]
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Movement 2: Galiard
[1'02]
|
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Movement 1: Pavion
[4'13]
|
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The Gramophone Award-winning artist, Davitt Moroney has spent more than fifteen years planning this momentous project and Hyperion are proud to be able to bring Davitt’s wealth of expertise and musicianship to the label. As an authentic complete survey of this music, six different instruments have been used for the recording – two different harpsichords, muselar virginal, clavichord, chamber organ, and the Ahrend organ at L’Église-Musée des Augustins, Toulouse, France (where the huge and high nave creates an echo that lasts for nearly fifteen seconds, not unlike the acoustic at Lincoln Cathedral where Byrd was the organist and master of the choristers); and L’Abbaye Royale de Fontevraud, Frane, the burial place of Henry II and Richard the Lionheart. According to ancient legend, the phoenix (an image Byrd used in his first publication in 1575) is reborn from the centre of a blazing fire every five hundred years. Byrd, indeed, had to wait nearly as long before modern editions, concerts and recordings have been able to bring his music back to life. Davitt Moroney is the perfect musician for the job. |