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Track(s) taken from SIGCD338

In ieiunio et fletu

composer
5vv ATTBarB; Cantiones sacrae, 1575
author of text
Respond at Matins on the first Sunday in Lent, cf Joel 2: 17

Contrapunctus, Owen Rees (conductor)
Recording details: November 2012
Church of St Michael and All Angels, Oxford, United Kingdom
Produced by Adrian Peacock
Engineered by David Hinitt
Release date: July 2013
Total duration: 4 minutes 54 seconds
 

Other recordings available for download

The Tallis Scholars, Peter Phillips (conductor)
The Cardinall's Musick, Andrew Carwood (conductor)
The Gesualdo Six, Owain Park (director)
Winchester Cathedral Choir, David Hill (conductor)

Reviews

'This debut recording by the clean-voiced and agile Contrapunctus ensemble includes a genuine discovery, perhaps expected when scholar/conductor Owen Rees is in charge. Rees has built a reputation as a seeker-out of lost choral glories of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and here reveals a 'new' work by Thomas Tallis. Previously thought to be an instrumental piece marked simply 'Libera', Rees makes a convincing case that its underpinning is the plainchant antiphon, Libera nos, salva nos, indicating that Tallis intended it for voices. The choir sings it and works by Byrd, Philippe de Monte, Pedro de Cristo and Martin Peerson with admirable, firm-toned fluidity. More, please' (The Observer)

'Owen Rees's vocal ensemble Contrapunctus here presents a programme of Renaissance polyphony ingeniously employing lamentations for the subjugation of Jerusalem as code expressions of the plight of both English Catholics under Protestant rule, and Portuguese oppressed by Spanish hegemony. It's a rich seam of material by such as Tallis, Byrd and Cardoso. The theme is most evocatively summarised in the line from Psalm 136, How shall we sing the song of the Lord in a strange land?This forms the root both of Philippe de Monte's enchanting eight-voice motet setting of Super Flumina Babylonis, and William Byrd's equally exquisite response, Quomodo Cantabimus' (The Independent)

In ieiunio et fletu is a penitential text particularly suited to Ash Wednesday, with priests weeping at the altar and pleading for forgiveness for the people. It is printed in the 1575 Cantiones at an extremely low pitch and its use of ledger lines in the bass parts is also unusual (this being something that printers would usually try to avoid). This beautiful piece is typical of Tallis’ late style. He has learned lessons from Archbishop Cranmer’s rule about one note for each syllable but writes powerful music with rich harmonic turns and sobbing imitation in the final section. This mature, sophisticated, rhetorical style is peculiar to Tallis and the result of his many years of varied composition, and was possibly the greatest gift he bequeathed to his pupil and friend, William Byrd.

from notes by Andrew Carwood © 2016

In ieiunio et fletu est un texte pénitentiel particulièrement adapté au Mercredi des Cendres, les prêtres pleurant à l’autel et implorant le pardon pour le peuple. Il est imprimé dans les Cantiones de 1575 dans une tessiture extrêmement grave et son utilisation de lignes supplémentaires dans les parties de basse est également inhabituelle (car les imprimeurs essayaient d’habitude de l’éviter). Cette magnifique pièce est typique du style de Tallis dans sa maturité. Il a tiré des leçons de la règle de l’archevêque Cranmer prescrivant une note par syllabe, mais écrit une musique puissante avec de riches tournures harmoniques et une imitation des sanglots dans la section finale. Ce style rhétorique et raffiné de la maturité est propre à Tallis et résulte de nombreuses années d’une pratique de la composition très diversifiée; c’est peut-être le plus beau cadeau qu’il légua à son élève et ami, William Byrd.

extrait des notes rédigées par Andrew Carwood © 2016
Français: Marie-Stella Pâris

In ieiunio et fletu ist ein Bußetext, der für Aschermittwoch besonders passend ist, wenn die Priester am Altar weinen und um Vergebung für die Menschheit bitten. In der Ausgabe der Cantiones von 1575 ist es in extrem tiefer Lage abgedruckt und der Gebrauch von Hilfslinien in den Bassstimmen ist ebenfalls ungewöhnlich (Drucker suchten derartiges für gewöhnlich zu vermeiden). Dieses wunderschöne Stück ist ein typisches Beispiel für Tallis’ Spätstil. Er hatte gelernt, mit dem erzbischöflichen Gebot geschickt umzugehen, wonach ein Ton pro Silbe zu setzen war, und komponiert gleichwohl beeindruckende Musik mit herrlichen harmonischen Wendungen und schluchzender Imitation im letzten Abschnitt. Diesen reifen, anspruchsvollen, rhetorischen Personalstil hatte Tallis entwickelt, nachdem er viele Jahre lang unterschiedlichen musikalischen Anforderungen hatte gerecht werden müssen—gleichzeitig war dies das vielleicht größte Geschenk, das er seinem Schüler und Freund William Byrd hinterließ.

aus dem Begleittext von Andrew Carwood © 2016
Deutsch: Viola Scheffel

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