Saturday, 17 April 2010, 8pm
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Road, Kew
Subscription Concert 2
The challenge of writing many polyphonic lines without forbidden consecutive unisons, fifths or octaves was something that Renaissance composers relished. Most were contented to develop the technique to a maximum of six or eight voices, but there were those who set themselves higher goals, among whom Antoine Brumel was possibly the first to write a whole Mass for twelve voices. The work is based on the Easter Lauds antiphon Et ecce terrae motus, and our program complements it with contemporaneous works for the Easter season.
PROGRAM
Antoine Busnoys Victimae paschali laudes
Heinrich Isaac De Resurrectione Domini
Introitus: Resurrexi
Graduale: Haec Dies
Alleluia: Pascha nostrum
Prosa: Laudes Salvatori voce
Communio: Pascha nostrum
Josquin Desprez In exitu Israel
Antoine Brumel Missa Et ecce terrae motus
Kyrie – Gloria – Credo – Sanctus
Nicolas Gombert Regina caeli laetare
DISCANTUS | CONTRATENOR | TENOR | BASSUS |
Deborah Summerbell | Belinda Wong | Tim Van Nooten | Julien Robinson |
Carol Veldhoven | Jennifer Mathers | Matthew Thomson | Thomas Drent |
Kathryn Pisani | Rebecca Woods | Frank Prain | Alistair Clark |
Kristy Biber | Peter Campbell | Stuart Tennant | Chris Potter |
Maria Pisani | Niki Ebacioni | Daniel Thomson | Tim Daly |
Katherine Norman | Paul Bentley | Nick Dinopolous |
REVIEW
Tuesday, 20 April 2010, The Age [Melbourne], page 13.
Choir for connoisseurs rejoices in angelic praises
Clive O’Connell
THE latest program offered by the Ensemble Gombert, directed by John O’Donnell, divided cleanly into two
parts celebrating the Easter season. For Saturday evening’s first half, the singers worked through music for
four voices: Isaac’s De Resurrectione Domini that comprises settings of the propers for the Easter Sunday
Mass, bracketed by the Binchois motet Victimae paschali laudes and In exitu Israel attributed to Josquin
Desprez.
After interval, the choir expanded for the night’s sumptuous centrepiece, Brumel’s famous mass in 12 lines,
with a pendant motet for the same multiple layers, Regina coeli laetare, by the group’s patron composer.
A few changes in personnel find the group’s alto line taking in a pair of countertenors, Peter Campbell and
Paul Bentley, which gives the choral mix an added aggressive timbre, most immediately noticeable in parts of
the Isaac settings like the focal Prosa/Sequence with its polyphonic verses. In similar fashion, the four basses
in this part of the night were dominated by the reinforcing power of Tim Daly during the solid Josquin setting
of Psalms 114 and 115.
Brumel’s mass based on the plainchant Et ecce terrae motus received an impassioned reading, its opening
sections yielding powerful waves of sonority as chords changed texture with a vehement address. The score’s
longer sections — Credo and Sanctus/Benedictus — offer a wealth of textural variety, but where the
Gomberts excelled was in the massive blocks of interweaving chords, making a stunning impact in the
treatment of the words in excelsis with a sudden leap from a spare duet for soprano and countertenor lines to
an explosion of sonority: one of music’s finest depictions of the endless angelic praises that hurtle around
Heaven’s throne.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age
Correction:
The composer named Binchois should instead be named Busnoys