Magnificat @MRC (2014)

Thursday, 2 October 2014, 6pm
Melbourne Recital Centre – Salon
Local Heroes Series 2014

Program
Urmas Sisask Benedictio
Arvo Part Magnificat
Sieben Magnificat-Antiphonen
Ode IX
from Kanon pokajanen
Edmund Rubbra Mass in Honour of St Teresa of Avila
Calvin Bowman Death be not proud

Estonian composer Arvo Pärt takes centre stage in this program with three works in three languages (Latin, German and Church Slavonic) based on or around the Song of Mary, universally known as Magnificat. The program is introduced by a short work from a compatriot and complemented by the last significant choral work of English composer Edmund Rubbra, and Australian Calvin Bowman’s settings of John Donne, composed for Ensemble Gombert in 2008.

SINGERS

Soprano
Fiona Seers
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Lieschke
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Helen Gagliano
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Collins
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Bland
Andrew Murray
Michael Strasser
Mike Ormerod

 

Commemorating Anne of Brittany (2014)

Concert 1: Saturday 22 February 2014 at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

When Anne of Brittany, uniquely the wife of two successive French kings, as well as Duchess of Brittany in her own right, died on 9 January 1514, her funeral lasted for forty days. Such an extended ceremony must have involved a lot of music, though only the three motets presented here can be identified with certainty. Nevertheless it is generally accepted that Prioris’s fine Requiem was also written for the occasion.

 

 

Program
Jean Mouton
(c.1459-1522)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Pierre Moulu
(1484?-c.1550)
Fière Attropos
Costanzo Festa
(c.1490-1543)
Quis dabit oculis nostris
Josquin Desprez
(c.1450-1521)
De profundis
Johannes Prioris
(c.1460-c.1514)
Requiem

Introitus: Requiem aeternam
Kyrie
Graduale: Si ambulum
Sequentia: Dies irae
(Gregorian chant)
Offertorium: Domine Jesu Christe
Sanctus
Agnus Dei
Communio: Lux aeterna

 

SINGERS

Soprano
Carol Veldhoven
Deborah Summerbell
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Miranda Gronow
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Thomas Bland
Chris Potter
Michael Strasser
Jerzy Kozlowski

 

REVIEW

Tuesday, 25 Febrary 2014, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
Ensemble Gombert in fine renditions of funeral music for Anne of Brittany

Clive O’Connell

Commemorating Anne Of Brittany
Ensemble Gombert
Xavier College Chapel
February 22

When she died in 1514 aged 31, Duchess Anne of Brittany had been married to a German emperor and two French kings and had had 14 pregnancies. The last independent ruler of her state, she was a notable arts patron and her funeral rites lasted for 40 days, involving a good deal of music, although very few original compositions for these ceremonies have been documented.

For Saturday’s opening Ensemble Gombert series recital, artistic director John O’Donnell put together a program of works, both definites and maybes, connected with this remarkable woman’s extended obsequies, the most significant a Requiem by Johannes Prioris. This mass reveals an honest individuality and the choir gave it a finely-shaped performance with a satisfying balance between soprano and bass lines, notably in the rich Kyrie and a calmly celebratory Agnus Dei, although the well-worn plainchant Dies irae sequence seemed an odd if suitably sombre interpolation.

Two settings of the text Quis dabit oculis nostris, by Jean Mouton and Costanzo Festa, showed once again the Gomberts’ hallmarks of linear balance and controlled power. This was further substantiated by a glowing reading of Josquin’s late five-part De profundis with an interpretative depth that distinguishes this ensemble’s work at its best.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

A Franco-Flemish Selection (2013)

Concert 1: Saturday 23 February at 8.00 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

The major work of this program, new to our repertoire, is Josquin’s Missa Malheur me bat, regarded as one of the composer’s most polished settings of the Mass. It was also highly regarded by his contemporaries and subsequent generations, publications and manuscript copies occurring over a period of about 100 years, a remarkably long life for a work at this time. Also new to the repertoire is Gombert’s Magnificat secundi toni. The remaining works have been perennial favourites, though we have not performed Martini’s extraordinary Magnificat tertii toni in the current millennium.

PROGRAM
Johannes Martini – Magnificat tertii toni
Johannes Ghiselin – Regina caeli
Josquin Desprez – Missa Malheur me bat
Nicolas Gombert – Magnificat secundi toni
Jean Richafort – Philomena, praevia
Clemens non Papa – Fremuit spiritu Jesus
Orlandus Lassus – Nunc dimittis primi toni

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Thomas Bland
Andrew Murray
Chris Potter
Mike Ormerod

Christmas to Candlemas: Iberia (2012)

Concert 5: Saturday 8 December at 8.00 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 5

The Portuguese composer Duarte Lobo is a newcomer to Ensemble Gombert’s repertoire. His Christmas responsories were published in his Opuscula of 1602. The remainder of this program is Spanish, featuring two of the three greatest Spanish composers of the 16th century — the third, Victoria, having received a lot of our attention both before and during 2011, the quattrocentenary of his death. We first performed Morales’ Missa Quaeramus cum pastoribus in 2006. A remarkably felicitous work, it returns by popular request.

PROGRAM
Cristóbal de Morales Pastores, dicite, quidnam vidistis?
Cristóbal de Morales O magnum mysterium
Cristóbal de Morales Cum natus esset Jesus
Francisco Guerrero Pastores loquebantur
Duarte Lobo Natalitiae Noctis Responsoria
Duarte Lobo Hodie nobus caelorum rex
Duarte Lobo Hodie nobis de caelo
Duarte Lobo Quem vidistis pastores?
Duarte Lobo O magnum mysterium
Duarte Lobo Beata Dei genitrix
Duarte Lobo Sancta et immaculata
Duarte Lobo Beata viscera
Duarte Lobo Verbum caro factus est
Cristóbal de Morales Missa Quaeramus cum pastoribus

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Kieran Rowe
Andrew Murray
Chris Potter
Mike Ormerod
REVIEW

Wednesday, 12 December 2012, The Age [Melbourne], n.p.
All-comers drawn to season celebrations with Iberian twist
Clive O’Connell

SOMETHING of a contrast in city styles, the Australian Brandenburg Choir and Orchestra from Sydney offered a program with something for everyone on Saturday evening, while Melbourne’s own Ensemble Gombert presented its annual Christmas recital with a focus on Renaissance Spain and Portugal.

For the first time, Paul Dyer brought his all-comers’ seasonal celebration here, using a small group of instrumentalists to support the 30-plus Brandenburg choir. The Brandenburgers centred on variety, their stream of vocal and instrumental groupings in constant flux with just enough solo exposure for Matthew Manchester’s subtle cornetto and the unexpectedly reticent saxophones of Christina Leonard, the complex supported by deft percussion from Jess Ciampa and the lutes of Tommie Andersson and Samantha Cohen.

Leading his singers in a focused 16th century Iberian retrospective, John O’Donnell began with music by Morales: the Mass Quaeramus cum pastoribus interleaved by three motets, including a lengthy retelling of the Magi’s journey to and from Bethlehem. The mass calls for two bass lines and on this night the dynamic output came across as uneven, one individual voice disturbingly prominent towards the end of the night in motets by Duarte Lobo and Guerrero.

The Brandenburgers enjoyed something like relieved acclaim in their later popular items – Hark! The Herald Angels Sing in a barbershop arrangement, the soggy sentiment of The Little Drummer Boy headed by a trio of fresh-voiced sopranos, and a rousingly rapid O Come all ye Faithful. But the most moving passage of play came in an Italian song based on La Carpinese, more suited to Good Friday than this time of year.

With the Gomberts’ Christmas observance, the more numerous the lines, the more satisfying the accomplishment, reaching a particularly high mark during those segments in the lush Lobo Responsories that call for all eight lines to operate simultaneously. This proved most compelling in the Portuguese composer’s setting of the opening to St John’s Gospel where the rich polyphonic texture and declamatory assurance stripped away the tawdry tat that clutters the astonishing lesson behind the Christmas miracle.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Remembering Henry, Prince of Wales (2012)

Saturday 8 September at 5.30 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

Henry, Prince of Wales, was the elder son of James I and Anne of Denmark. His death at the age of eighteen from typhoid fever on 6 November 1612 was bewailed throughout England — and was, with the eventual succession to the throne of his inept brother Charles I, to change the course of English history. The general outpouring of grief for Hally (as Henry was affectionately known) was taken up in numerous songs, anthems and motets, many of which draw on the biblical texts of David’s laments for Absalom and Jonathan. This program remembers Henry in spoken word, songs for solo voice with instrumental accompaniment, and choral items.

Featuring Heleng Gagliano (soprano) and Rodney Hall (reader)

Please note the earlier start time of 5.30pm for concerts during the colder months.

PROGRAM
Voice & harpsichord: Thomas Campion All looks be pale
Reader:
George Chapman, An Epicede, or Funerall Song (excerpt)
Choir:
Thomas Tomkins Know you not (“Prince Henry, his Funerall Anthem”)
Reader:
Sir Simonds D’Ewes Autobiography (excerpt)
Voice & harpsichord:
William Byrd, Fair Britain Isle
Reader:
Geoffrey Goodman, The Court of James the First (excerpt)
Voice & harpsichord:
Orlando Gibbons, Nay, let me weep
Reader:
Sir John Holles, member of Prince Henry’s household, Letter to Lord Gray (excerpt)
Choir:
Richard Dering, Contristatus est Rex David
Richard Dering, And the king was moved
John Milton O woe is me for thee
Thomas Tomkins When David heard that Absalom was slain
Thomas Tomkins Then David mourned
Thomas Weelkes, O Jonathan
Thomas Weelkes, When David Heard
Reader:
Thomas Campion, An Elegy upon the Untimely Death of Prince Henry
Voice & harpsichord:
John Coprario Songs of Mourning: Bewailing the untimely death of Prince Henry (words by Thomas Campion)
1: To the most sacred King James
2: To the most sacred Queene ANne
3: To the most High and Mighty Prince Charles
4: To the most princely and vertuous the Lady Elizabeth
5: To the most illustrious and mighty Fredericke the fijt, Count Palatine of the Rhein
6: To the most disconsolate Great Brittaine
7: To the World
Reader:
William Drummond of Hawthorndean, Tears on the Death of Moeliades (penultimate sonnet)
Choir:
John Ward No object dearer
Reader: William Drummond of Hawthornden, Tears on the Death of Moeliades (final sonnet)
Choir: John Ward Weep forth your tears and do lament

Purchase tickets to this concert.

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Kristy Biber
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Matthew Thomson 

 

Bass
Kieran Rowe
Andrew Murray
Alistair Clark

 

The Sistine Chapel Ceiling (2012)

Saturday 19 May 2012 at 5.30 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

Michelangelo, reluctant painter of the Sistine Chapel ceiling, completed the four-year task in 1512. The Chapel was first opened to the public on 1 November (All Saints’ Day) the same year. What music was performed on that occasion is not known for certain; but Josquin’s Missa Gaudeamus is based on the Introit for All Saints’ Day, and the Mass was copied into the Sistine Chapel choirbooks shortly before that time, making it a prime suspect. The motets that make up the remainder of this program were also copied into the choirbooks shortly before or during 1512, so at the very least these works were in the choir’s repertoire at this time, allowing our imaginations to synchronise sight and sound.

Please note the earlier start time of 5.30pm for concerts during the colder months.

PROGRAM
Antoine Brumel Laudate Dominum in caelis
Jacob Obrecht Laudemus nunc
Johannes Prioris In principio erat Verbum
Loyset Compère Ad honorem tuum Christe
Josquin Desprez Liber generationes Jesu
Josquin Desprez Salve Regina
Josquin Desprez Missa Gaudeamus

Purchase tickets to this concert.

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Kirsty Biber
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Matthew Thomson
Vaughan McAlley 

 

Bass
Kieran Rowe
Andrew Murray
Philip Nicholls
Alistair Clark

 

Barock Passionmusik (2012)

Saturday 24 March at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 2

With guest soloists Daniel Thomson (Evangelist) and Jerzy Kozlowski (Jesus)

St John’s account of the Passion of Christ is recited throughout most of the Western Church on Good Friday. Musical settings abound, from Gregorian chant to Arvo Pärt’s Passio of 1982. This program presents two of the finest German Baroque settings before Bach’s great Johannes-Passion. Demantius (1631) sets the Gospel as a large six-voice motet in three sections. Apart from introductory and concluding sentences, the text is entirely that presented in St John’s Gospel. Schütz (1666) also frames his biblical narrative with introduction and conclusion — the latter a setting of a stanza of the chorale ‘Christus, der uns selig macht,’ with which we open the program in a double-choir setting by Praetorius — but employs solo recitative for the Evangelist and individual characters, and four-voice choir for the interjections of the crowds.

PROGRAM
Praetorius Christus, der uns selig macht
Christoph Demantius Passion nach dem Evangelisten Johannes
Heinrich Schütz Historia des Leidens und Sterbens unser Herrn und Heilandes Jesu Christi nach dem Evangelisten St. Johannes

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Fiona Seers
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim Van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Andrew Murray
Tim Daly
Alistair Clark

Commemorating Gabrieli & Haßler (2012)

Saturday 18 February at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 1

This program commemorates two outstanding Late Renaissance composers whose lives encroached on the early years of the Baroque. The two were friends and, for a period of some eighteen months, fellow students of Giovanni’s uncle Andrea Gabrieli. The two collaborated in the composition of at least one piece, while they currently share the attribution of another. Organ works by both composers will supplement the choral program listed here, and an ensemble of Renaissance brass, strings and organ joins us for this commemoration.

PROGRAM
Giovanni Gabrieli In ecclesiis
Giovanni Gabrieli Jubilate Deo
Giovanni Gabrieli Deus, qui beati Marcum
Giovanni Gabrieli O Domine Jesu Christe
Giovanni Gabrieli Deus, Deus meus
Giovanni Gabrieli O magnum mysterium
Giovanni Gabrieli Hodie completi sunt
Giovanni Gabrieli Magnificat a 8
Hans Leo Haßler Dixit Maria
Hans Leo Haßler Miserere mei, Deus
Hans Leo Haßler Missa Octava a 8

Danny Lucin, cornetto
Briar Goessi, violino
Ruth Wilkinson, flauto & viola da gamba
Julian Bain, trombone
Bob Collins, trombone
Glenn Bardwell, trombone
John O’Donnell, organo

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Maria Pisani
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Yi Wen Chin
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim Van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Matthew Thomson
Bass
Kieran Rowe
Andrew Murray
Alistair Clark

Christmas to Candlemas (2011)

Saturday, 10 December 2011 at 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 4
A French Baroque Christmas

Our annual Christmas to Candlemas visits to Louis XIV’s France this year, though the prolific Antoine Charpentier, whose music we feature, was never employed by the court. The Messe de Minuit pour Noël (Midnight Mass for Christmas) has become such a favourite in our time that it is surprising to learn that it was first published in 1962. Ensemble Gombert is joined by the instrumentalists of Accademia Arcadia for this French Baroque Christmas celebration.

PROGRAM

Antoine Charpentier  In nativitatem Domini canticum: Quem vidistis pastores? (H.314)
Antoine Charpentier In nativitatem Domini canticum: Usquequo avertis faciem tuam Domine (H.416)
Antoine Charpentier Messe de Minuit pour Noël (H.9)
Kyrie – Gloria – Credo – Offertoire: Laissez paître vos bêtes – Sanctus – Agnus Dei

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Katherine Norman
Fiona Seers
Maria Pisani
Kathryn Pisani
Alto
Belinda Wong
Jenny Mathers
Niki Ebacioni
Rebecca Woods
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Tim van Nooten
Vaughan McAlley
Stuart Tennent
Bass
Andrew Murray
Samuel Allchurch
Alistair Clark
Kieran Rowe


ACCADEMIA ARCADIA

Lucina Moon, Violin 1
Chris Ruiter, Violin 2
John Quaine, Viola
Ruth Wilkinson, Viola da gamba
Greg Dikmans, Flute 1
Alison Catanach, Flute 2
John O’Donnell, Organ

 

Christmas to Candlemas CD

Released on Tall Poppies (TP121, 2000)

The title refers to the period between 25 December, the Feast of the Nativity of our Lord, commonly called Christmas (when the Church celebrates the Mass of Christ), and 2 February, the feast known as the Presentation of Christ in the Temple or, as it was commonly known in past centuries, Candlemas (The Mass of Candles), referring to the tradition of lighting candles during the singing of the Nunc dimittis before Mass.

The pieces are selections from the ‘Christmas to Candlemas’ concert programs that Ensemble Gombert has been performing annually since 1994. Often billed as “Melbourne’s carol-free Christmas concert”, ‘Christmas to Candlemas’ usually features an array of motets and a Mass setting chosen from the vast array of riches from the High and Late Renaissance.”

1. Jean Mouton – Nesciens mater virgo virum (a8)
2. Josquin Des Préz – Praeter rerum seriem (a6)
3. Andreas de Silva – Puer natus est nobis (a5)
4. Nicolas Gombert – Hodie nobis caelorum Rex (a5)
5. Jacobus Clemens non Papa – O magnum mysterium (a6)
6. Thomas Tallis – ‘Gloria’ from Missa Puer natus est nobis (a7)
7. Tomás Luis de Victoria – Quem vidistis, pastores (a6)
8. Jacobus Clemens non Papa – Vox in Rama (a4)
9. Orlando de Lassus – Omnes de Saba venient (a8)
10. John Sheppard – Reges Tharsis et insulae (a6)
11. Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina – Senex puerum portabat (a5)
12. Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina – Nunc dimittis (a12)

Singers

Soprano Alto Tenor Bass
Deborah Summerbell Jennifer Mathers Peter Campbell Alexander Roose
Carol Veldhoven Belinda Wong Tim van Nooten Philip Nicholls
Fiona Seers Niki Ebacioni Vaughan McAlley Tom Reid
Maria Pisani Rebecca Woods Stuart Tennant Tim Daly
Claerwen Jones
Kathryn Pisani

 

REVIEW

Noel Ancell, Music Forum, May 2007

While there may not be a word for it, there can be no doubt that there is a condition – particularly suffered by church musicians – of carol allergy. At this time of year we are regaled by countless performances – many of them atrocious – of those traditional hymns pertaining to the Christmas season. Ensemble Gombert has tried to alleviate the condition over many years by presenting ‘Melbourne’s carol-free Christmas concert’ regularly since 1994.

This CD is a compilation of some of the pieces from those concerts. If you are looking for anything like the usual seasonal offerings, forget it. This is a serious, even erudite, exploration of some of the music written for the forty days between December 25 and February 2, the feast of the Presentation of Christ in the Temple (otherwise known as Candlemas).

The repertoire comes almost exclusively from the 16th century. As one would expect, there are pieces by Palestrina, Victoria, Tallis, Lassus, and the eponymous Nicholas Gombert, but also gems from the lesser-known Jean Mouton, Andreas de Silva, Clemens (both father and non Papa), John Sheppard and Josquin. While there is a good deal of stylistic similarity, the differences one observes when hearing these composers side by side are fascinating.

The individual vocal characteristics of the singers add to the fascination: the voices are matched, but not blanded (sic), and this enriches the polyphonic textures, clearly differentiating the interweaving lines. The helpful, but not obscuring, acoustic of the Xavier College Chapel, one of the ensemble’s favourite haunts, delivers a range of colour that enhances the experience.

Director John O’Donnell has a wonderful ear for pitch and, apart from a few places at entries, his singers demonstrate habits of intonation that are quite exemplary. Particularly interesting – and well executed – are the characteristic pitch clashes of the works by Desprez and his ilk.

Rhythmically, I wished for more precision. This music abounds in rhythmical subtlety, even ambiguity. But the performances are less exciting than they could have been, especially at moments of transition between duple and triple metre. And what should surely be joyful ejaculations – Alleluia and Noe – are often plain dull.

This is not a CD for the newcomer to choral music, but it is an interesting and valuable addition to the available recordings of music from this period and a relaxing relief from the prevailing fare of Christmas carols.