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Track(s) taken from CDA68241

Timete Dominum

composer
5vv
author of text
Psalm 33 (34): 10-11

Cinquecento
Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
Recording details: July 2019
Kloster Pernegg, Waldviertel, Austria
Produced by Adrian Peacock
Engineered by Markus Wallner
Release date: July 2020
Total duration: 4 minutes 42 seconds

Cover artwork: Earth (1570) by Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1527-1593)
akg-images / Erich Lessing
 

Reviews

‘Since their inception, Cinquecento have shone a light on the Imperial Habsburg court, which hitherto had warranted barely a metaphorical footnote in music history. Thanks to this Vienna-based ensemble, we now know that the court boasted some exceptional composers … while the album’s tenor is undeniably solemn, their sonority, soft and intimate yet full, gives real pleasure. Of all their recordings devoted to ‘minor masters’, this strikes me as one of the finest’ (Gramophone)

‘These singers are always nicely in tune and effectively blended, especially in the slower movements of the Mass where they strongly project the chordal colouring in the 'Qui tollis' and perfectly intensify the false relations in the first Agnus’ (BBC Music Magazine)
PERFORMANCE
RECORDING

‘Cinquecento, five men from five countries, have made a happy habit of presenting choral works by little-known and even often forgotten figures. They have come up with many gems, and here they have largely done so again … there is some gorgeous singing here and the blend of the voices is immaculate and sensitive’ (MusicWeb International)» More

‘This is Cinquecento’s twelfth album for Hyperion, and notwithstanding the unfamiliar repertoire here I don’t think I have heard them sound more radiant. After sixteen years they seem to be hitting their peak. There is a naturalness to the singing here which is as relaxed and instinctive as it is polished. Everything is seamless. Their sound seems perfectly tailored to the warm, rounded acoustics of the monastery at Pernegg in the far north of Austria. The clarity and unanimity of their diction is especially remarkable given their multinational line-up (the five singers featured here hail from Austria, Belgium, Britain, Germany and Switzerland), the confidence with which this hitherto little-known music emerges is testament to what must be fastidious and intensive preparation. Regardless of anything else, the new disc incorporates 71 minutes of fabulous singing … if Cinquecento’s recorded catalogue amounts to a plea on behalf of the underdog, long forgotten figures such as Regnart, Lupi, Guyot, Schoendorff and now Johannes de Cleve could scarcely have imagined such polished advocacy for their work. The group’s performances on this new disc raise the bar once more for this long unsung repertoire. The Hyperion recording is predictably unimpeachable’ (MusicWeb International)» More

‘This disc once again proves that we know only a tip of the iceberg of renaissance polyphony. Hardly any music by Cleve is available on disc, which is surprising considering its excellent quality, and the importance of Cleve in his own time. Cinquecento has done any lover of this kind of repertoire a great favour by delivering such superb performances. Like I said, it is one of the main ensembles in this repertoire, and their status is well deserved. These five voices blend perfectly, and the singers show a supreme command of legato. At the same time, they do everything necessary to make sure that the text is clearly understandable, even in pieces with a dense texture. There is some fine and effective dynamic shading, and particularly crucial episodes are nicely emphasized’ (MusicWeb International)» More
Timete Dominum is written in a mellifluous style reminiscent of Palestrina, characterized by a harmonious balance between disjunct and conjunct melodic motion (i.e. between leaps and stepwise motion), and a smooth and regular treatment of dissonance. The piece is set in the gentle and modern-sounding Ionian mode (the ‘major mode’ of later tonal music): the fear of the Lord enjoined upon the listener is not a source of anxiety, but of consolation. Despite the harmonic centre on C, the piece includes some unexpected harmonic movement, which expands the tonal palette of the piece; for example, the first part cadences unexpectedly on E.

from notes by Grantley McDonald © 2020

Timete Dominum est écrit dans un style mélodieux qui fait penser à Palestrina, caractérisé par un équilibre harmonieux entre mouvement mélodique disjoint et conjoint (c’est-à-dire entre des sauts et le mouvement conjoint), et un traitement doux et régulier de la dissonance. Cette pièce est écrite dans le mode ionien doux et moderne (le «mode majeur» de la future musique tonale): la crainte du Seigneur imposée à l’auditeur n’est pas source d’anxiété, mais de consolation. Malgré la focalisation harmonique sur do, cette pièce comprend un mouvement harmonique inattendu, qui élargit sa palette tonale; par exemple, la première partie module de façon inattendue sur mi.

extrait des notes rédigées par Grantley McDonald © 2020
Français: Marie-Stella Pâris

Timete Dominum ist einem Stil gehalten, der an Palestrina erinnert: Wohlklang, geprägt von vollkommener Balance zwischen dem Fortschreiten in Schritten und in Sprüngen sowie von geschmeidigem, regelgemäßem Gebrauch von Dissonanzen. Das Stück folgt dem weichen, gleichsam modern klingenden ionischen Modus, dem heutigen Dur-Tongeschlecht: Die Furcht des Herrn, die dem Hörer hier angetragen wird, gibt nicht Anlass zu Schrecken, sondern verspricht Trost. Obwohl C das harmonische Zentrum des Stücks bildet, erweitern manche unerwarteten harmonischen Wendungen den tonartlichen Rahmen, etwa wenn der erste Teil unverhofft auf E schließt.

aus dem Begleittext von Grantley McDonald © 2020
Deutsch: Friedrich Sprondel

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