Recordings
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Phinot: Missa Si bona suscepimus & other sacred music
CDA67696
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Details
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The first half of the motet proceeds in a contrapuntally unproblematic way; only when the son begins to describe his miserable circumstances (‘hic fame pereo’) does the modulation begin, achieving the entire shift in an extraordinary passage a little over half a minute long (3'45" to 4'20"). Having so to speak ‘found his feet’ in the new tonality the son resolves to go back to his father to beg forgiveness (‘Surgam et ibo’), but the pain of his humiliation is underlined by the highly expressive downward sequence of suspensions (‘et dicam ei’) before the plea ‘Make me as one of your servants’ (‘Fac me sicut unum ex mercenariis tuis’) returns in a mood of resignation. Such a direct narrative explanation may seem out of place for a motet published as early as 1538; yet the remarkable effect both of the ‘secret chromatic’ spiral and the later suspension passage suggests just such an interpretation despite the early date.
from notes by Roger Jacob & Stephen Rice © 2009