Motets of Johann Sebastian Bach (2000)

Sunday, 14 May 2000, 2pm.
Gold Treasury Museum, Spring St, Melbourne.

PROGRAM

Johann Sebastian Bach Komm, Jesus, komm
Johann Sebastian Bach Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf
Johann Sebastian Bach Jesu, meine Freude
Johann Sebastian Bach Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden
Johann Sebastian Bach Fürchte dich nicht
Johann Sebastian Bach Ich lasse dich nicht
Johann Sebastian Bach Singet dem Herrm ein neues Lied

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Jenny George Vaughan McAlley Andrew Fysh
Carol Veldhoven Margaret Arnold Peter Neustupny Philip Nicholls
Margaret Pisani Jennifer Mathers Peter Campbell Jonathan Wallis
Claerwen Jones Barbara Tattam Stuart Tennant John Weretka
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano

REVIEW

Tuesday, 16 May 2000, The Age [Melbourne], page 5.
Many voices make a rich recital
Clive O’Connell

IN A busy weekend, John O’Donnell and his Ensemble Gombert presented their latest subscription recital at
the Xavier Chapel, assisted by about 25 supernumeries for a program of large-scale choral works. Not that
the works were over-long, but several of them called for an exceptional number of participants.
Perhaps the best known sample of this type of music, the 40-part Spem in alium motet by Tallis, finished off
the evening, its thunder a little palliated by a preceding companion piece, Alessandro Striggio’s Ecce beatam
lucem – also for 40 individual singers and featuring passages of magnificently full-bodied choral sound.
The opening and less dense works were canonic in nature, sophisticated rounds for various combinations like
Ockeghem’s simple but effective Deo gratias for 36 voices and Josquin’s Qui habitat in adjutorio Altissimi for
24 lines. But the most dramatic and exciting work was Antoine Brumel’s Mass Et ecce terrae motus for 12
voices.
Perhaps it was the relative clarity of the piece or its accelerating contrasts of tempo and activity, but the Mass
made for very fine singing, energetic in accomplishment and a sterling sample of this group’s finely honed
musicality at its best.
The next day, the Gomberts were heard at closer quarters, singing the five double-choir Bach motets in one of
the larger rooms at the Gold Treasury Museum.
Where Saturday night had been sonorous and slow-moving, the second recital brought the listener to intimate
terms with some of the most polyphonically rich music ever written for voices. It was an enlightening
experience, as compelling as the finer moments in the polychoral recital but invested with the tension that
comes from hearing at close range works that demand extreme precision, the choir only a few metres from
everyone in the room.
The more energetic the music – like the openings and conclusions to Der Geist hilft and the infectious, jovial
Singet dem Herrn – the more one’s admiration for the Gomberts grew. There are few choirs that would have
coped as creditably with the performance conditions.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Music for Many Voices (2000)

Saturday, 13 May 2000, 8 pm.
Xavier College Chapel, Kew

Subscription Series 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, Striggio and Tallis scoring the highest honours with forty voices. For this program Ensemble Gombert is augmented by many friends to present a selection of works spanning about a century from Ockeghem to Marenzio.

PROGRAM

Johannes Ockeghem Deo gratias (à 36)
Robert Wylkinson Credo in Deum/Jesus autem (à 13)
Josquin Desprez  Qui habitat in adjutorio Altissimi (à 24)
Antoine Brumel Missa Et ecce terrae motus (à 12)
Robert Carver O bone Jesu (à 19)
Nicolas Gombert Regina caeli laetare (à 12)
Alessandra Sriggio Ecce beatam lucem (à 40)
Thomas Tallis Spem in alium (à 40)

Soprano Alto Tenor Bass
Deborah Summerbell Jenny George Vaughan McAlley Andrew Fysh
Carol Veldhoven Margaret Arnold Peter Neustupny Philip Nicholls
Margaret Pearce Jennifer Mathers Peter Campbell Jonathan Wallis
Claerwen Jones Barbara Tattam Stuart Tennant John Weretka
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano


Extra singers

Soprano: Sophie Clapperton, Kathryn Pisani, Suzanne Shakespeare, Jane Phillips, Sophie Pinkham
Alto: Tim Bell, Martha Billington, Niki Ebacioni, Chriss Jonas
Tenor: Irving Dekterev, Stephen O’Leary, Ben Owen, Frank Prain
Baritone/Bass: Mel Waters, John Waugh, Alex Fleetwood, Stephen Grant, Stephen Clements, Richard Droege, Grantley McDonald, John Pisani, Tom Reid, Tom Stringer, Kevin Munro.

REVIEW

Tuesday, 16 May 2000, The Age [Melbourne], page 5.
Many voices make a rich recital
Clive O’Connell

IN A busy weekend, John O’Donnell and his Ensemble Gombert presented their latest subscription recital at
the Xavier Chapel, assisted by about 25 supernumeries for a program of large-scale choral works. Not that
the works were over-long, but several of them called for an exceptional number of participants.
Perhaps the best known sample of this type of music, the 40-part Spem in alium motet by Tallis, finished off
the evening, its thunder a little palliated by a preceding companion piece, Alessandro Striggio’s Ecce beatam
lucem – also for 40 individual singers and featuring passages of magnificently full-bodied choral sound.
The opening and less dense works were canonic in nature, sophisticated rounds for various combinations like
Ockeghem’s simple but effective Deo gratias for 36 voices and Josquin’s Qui habitat in adjutorio Altissimi for
24 lines. But the most dramatic and exciting work was Antoine Brumel’s Mass Et ecce terrae motus for 12
voices.
Perhaps it was the relative clarity of the piece or its accelerating contrasts of tempo and activity, but the Mass
made for very fine singing, energetic in accomplishment and a sterling sample of this group’s finely honed
musicality at its best.
The next day, the Gomberts were heard at closer quarters, singing the five double-choir Bach motets in one of
the larger rooms at the Gold Treasury Museum.
Where Saturday night had been sonorous and slow-moving, the second recital brought the listener to intimate
terms with some of the most polyphonically rich music ever written for voices. It was an enlightening
experience, as compelling as the finer moments in the polychoral recital but invested with the tension that
comes from hearing at close range works that demand extreme precision, the choir only a few metres from
everyone in the room.
The more energetic the music – like the openings and conclusions to Der Geist hilft and the infectious, jovial
Singet dem Herrn – the more one’s admiration for the Gomberts grew. There are few choirs that would have
coped as creditably with the performance conditions.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy of The Age

Christmas to Candlemas (1999)

Tuesday 14 December 1999, 8pm
Wednesday 15 December 1999, 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Kew

Subscription Concert 5

PROGRAM

Tomás Luis de Victoria  O magnum mysterium
Tomás Luis de Victoria Quem vidistis, pastores?
Heinrich Isaac Puer natus est nobis
Nicolas Gombert Hodie nobis caelorum
Clemens non Papa Vox in Rama
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina O admirabile commercium
John Sheppard Reges Tharsis et insulae
Orlande de Lassus Omnes de Saba venient
Tomás Luis de Victoria Senex puerum portabat
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina Nunc dimittis (à 12)
William Byrd Mass for Five Voices with Propers In festo Purificationis:
William Byrd Susceptimus Deus
William Byrd Senex puerum portabat
William Byrd Diffusa est gratia
William Byrd Responsum accepit Simeon

Note: This was not the program advertised in the Subscription brochure, which was all Victoria

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Jennifer George Peter Campbell Andrew Fysh
Carol Veldhoven Margaret Arnold Frank Prain Tom Henry
Margaret Pearce Barbara Tattam Vaughan McAlley Jerzy Kozlowski
Claerwen Jones Stuart Tennant
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano


REVIEW

Friday, 17 December 1999, The Age [Melbourne], page 6
The usual Christmas fare
Clive O’Connell

IN AN evening of Christmas music for the sophisticated, John O’Donnell’s Ensemble Gombert presented
another “Christmas to Candlemas” program, concluding yet another year’s recital cycle.
Here again was the usual compendium of seasonal music by famous Renaissance writers – Palestrina, Byrd,
Victoria, Lassus – with excursions into more arcane names like Isaac, Sheppard, Clemens non Papa and the
group’s namesake.
Some of the first half’s motets we have heard in previous years, such as Gombert’s Hodie nobis caelorum,
Victoria’s touching Senex puerum portabat and the massive motet for double choir by Lassus, Omnes de Saba
venient.
The group’s vocal mix has gained somewhat in depth and character since I last heard the ensemble in this
chapel. Both sopranos and altos maintain an authoritative clarity and sparkling, clear color rarely achieved by
other groups, and so startling when there is the slightest crack in this group’s vocal veneer.
While there are still three basses only, all have years of experience; even when the part is divided, their
voices provide a calm, non-blustery support for the rest of the forces.
The tenor quartet has a pair of well-matched voices and two that struggle to achieve security and ease of
articulation.
In the evening’s most vocally diffuse offering – Palestrina’s 12-part Nunc dimittis – one could pick out most of
the individual lines at various stages, but the tenors were the least discernible and definite.
Nevertheless, the program’s second half, comprising Byrd’s Mass for Five Voices interspersed with the
composer’s own Propers for the Feast of the Purification, showed the Gomberts at close to their best. The
voices rarely came under stress and the subtleties that grace each line at various points (notably the “Agnus
Dei”, a highpoint in Tudor music) were delivered without overstatement or unnecessary color.
Clive O’Connell/Courtesy The Age

Three High Renaissance Requiems (1999)

Tuesday, 9 November 1999, 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Kew

Subscription Concert 4

Settings of the Requiem tend to be high points in composersÕ outputs. Often the setting has been written in memory of a particular person dear to the composer, which may explain the high level of inspiration. The three settings on this program are works that we have performed to acclaim over the past few years. It will be a very rich experience indeed to perform and hear them all in one concert.

PROGRAM

Johannes Ockeghem Missa pro defunctis
Pierre de la Rue Missa pro defunctis
Jean Richafort Missa pro defunctis

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Jenny George Peter Campbell Andrew Fysh
Carol Veldhoven Margaret Arnold Peter Neustupny Philip Nicholls
Margaret Pearce Jennifer Mathers Vaughan McAlley Jerzy Kozlowski
Claerwen Jones Barbara Tattam Stuart Tennant
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano


REVIEW
Friday, 12 November 1999 – The Age [Melbourne], page 4
Food of love satisfies the mind and soul
Joel Crotty

[…] While the Gryphon Gallery has a vibrant acoustic and rowdy neighbors, the quiet exterior and airy interior of
Xavier College’s chapel makes it a perfect space for Ensemble Gombert’s choral concerts. As usual, the
Gombert’s music director and conductor, John O’Donnell, came up with a fascinating concept of comparing
of three requiems composed by three composers across three different generations, straddling the 15th and
16th centuries. It was a bewitching trip across the Renaissance frontier.
Ockeghem’s Missa pro defunctis demonstrated his propensity for dark-toned colors and his ability to allow
the counterpoint to majestically flow without being unduly hampered by cadential points. The 11 voices
(sopranos were omitted) blended well in the different configurations. Full credit must go to the three basses –
Andrew Fysh, Philip Nicholls and Jerzy Kozlowski – who were uniformly excellent during the event. Pierre de la Rue, from the middle generation, was represented by his Missa pro fidelibus defunctis . The
complexities of the work rarely seemed to faze the 16 choristers, and the Sanctus was rendered in such a
stunning fashion that it was the highlight of the evening. But by the time youngest member of the trio –
Richafort – was presented to the audience, the group was starting to show signs of fatigue.
Nonetheless, Ensemble Gombert nourished the soul and, on the previous night, the Southbank Contemporary
Music Ensemble invigorated the mind.
Joel Crotty/Courtesy of The Age

Lassus and his Heritage (1999)

Tuesday, 14 September 1999, 8pm
Xavier College Chapel, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

Lassus, not Palestrina, was considered by his contemporaries to be the outstanding composer of his generation. He was certainly the most versatile, and he was extraordinarily prolific. A child of his time, he did not hesitate to build on material from works by his forerunners and contemporaries. This program presents some of the results of such homage, in each case preceded by the model.

PROGRAM

Josquin Desprez Huc me sydereo descendere iussit Olympo
Clemens non Papa Fremuit spiritu Jesus
Nicolas Gombert Mort et fortune
Jachet da Mantua Domine secundum actum meum
Orlande de Lassus Huc me sydereo descendere iussit Olympo
Orlande de Lassus Fremuit spiritu Jesus
Orlande de Lassus Magnificat tertii toni super Mort et fortune
Orlande de Lassus Missa Domine secundum actum meum

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Margaret Arnold Peter Campbell Andrew Fyrsh
Carol Veldhoven Jenny George Frank Prain Thomas Drent
Margaret Pearce Barbara Tattam Vaughan McAlley Philip Nicholls
Claerwen Jones Jennifer Mathers Stuart Tennant Jerzy Kozlowski
Maria Pisani


REVIEW

Friday, 17 September 1999, Herald-Sun [Melbourne], page 90.
Ensemble’s angelic voices simply heavenly
Johanna Selleck

ENSEMBLE Gombert are planning a big birthday party for next year – and so they should.
For almost 10 years they have enriched the cultural life of Melbourne, thrilling audiences with their purity of
sound and ability to make phrase endings melt imperceptibly into thin air.
Their voices resonate around the Xavier College Chapel like a mysterious emanation from some
unidentifiable source.
The 17 or so men and women who comprise the ensemble emit the most angelic sounds with the barest
visible exertion. The result is natural and unforced, a flowing stream. This concert explored work by the
master of Renaissance polyphony, Orlande de Lassus.
The four programmed works by Lassus were juxtaposed with examples by some contemporaries who had
either set the same texts or provided direct models for his own works.
Huc me sydereo descendere iussit Olympo by Josquin Desprez was followed by Lassus’ setting of the same,
then Fremuit spiritu Jesus, by Clemens non Papa was compared with Lassus.
As always with Ensemble Gombert, the outer parts were unswerving, while the inner parts meshed
beautifully.
Either side of interval came Gombert’s Chanson mort et fortune and Lassus’ Magnificat tertii toni super mort
et fortune, which derives from it, and Lassus’ Missa Domine secundum actum meum prefaced by the motet
by Jachet da Mantua which served as the model.
Lassus’ setting of the mass enhances the text to a level of supreme, seraphic beauty.
Ensemble Gombert demonstrated their ability to tap into the mystical side of this music and immerse the
listener. It was an experience not to be missed.

Joy and Sorrow in Baroque Germany (1999)

Friday, 3 September 1999, 8 pm
Sacred Heart Church, Grey St, St Kilda

Melbourne Early Music Festival

PROGRAM

Johann Sebastian Bach Brandenburg Concerto No 5
Johann Sebastian Bach Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen (Cantata 51)
Johann Sebastian Bach Fürchte dich nicht
Heinrich Schütz Musicalische Exequien

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Margaret Pearce
Claerwen Jones
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano
Alto
Jennifer George
Margaret Arnold
Jennifer Mathers
Barbara Tattam
Tenor
Peter Campbell
Vaughan McAlley
Peter Neustupny
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Jerzy Kozlowski
Andrew Fysh
Philip Nicholls
Thomas Drent

Margaret Pearce – soprano
Concentus Australis
John O’Donnell – conductor

REVIEW

Monday, 6 September 1999, The Age [Melbourne], page 5.
An interesting sample of early music
Clive O’Connell

This three-day festival, which has made its home at one of the more spacious St Kilda churches, began
effectively enough with a solid program of “late” early music, although there were slight traces of some
shortcomings that became more noticeable during the second day.
The music began with J.S. Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D.
With a quartet of strings for an orchestra, this minimalist version featured two soloists who are familiar
figures on the local scene: flautist Greg Dikmans and harpsichordist John O’Donnell. Both have been heard
several times in this work, and their reading remains rapid-fire, unsentimental and bracing.
The violin line was played by Cynthia O’Brien, home from Austria to lead her own Capella Corelli and, in
this case, to lend a lucid authority to this signature-work of the Baroque. O’Brien’s finely spun but assertive
sound made a highly appropriate foil for Dikmans’ calm, full-bodied flute, even if the whole work is
dominated by the virtuosic keyboard writing.
The church is an impressive building, with plenty of air to fill with sound and suited to choral music in
particular. With the Bach concerto, the acoustic impact was faint; sitting half-way up the church, you seemed
to be a long way aurally from the performers.
The Ensemble Gombert made a more telling impact with Bach’s Furchte dich nicht motet and the
Musicalische Exequien by Schutz. Even though the choral texture tended to be bottom-heavy in this building,
a clean attack and confidence bore witness to the singers’ skill and O’Donnell’s directorial vigilance.
On Saturday, students from the Early Music Studio at Melbourne University worked gainfully through works
by Machaut, Schein, Schutz and Monteverdi. The Early Voices Ensemble of about 10 sang with zest in
various combinations, suffering from an over-assertive tenor line.
These young musicians made a fair contribution to the festival, if one that was rough around the edges.
At the centre of the festival is an evening Mass, involving a complete setting of the proper and common for
voices and/or instruments. This year, the historical reference point was 15th-century Florence; members of
Les Six sang Dufay’s Ecce ancilla Dei setting to the accompaniment of Fonte Musicale’s sackbutts.
Musicologist John Stinson’s preparatory lecture on Florentine musical practice and personalities of the time
whetted one’s appetite, but the reality made for uneasy listening. This sample of this field of music-making
left me mildly grateful but not enthusiastic about the general standard of performance.

Glories of English Polyphony (1999)

Saturday, 17 April 1999, 8 pm
St John’s Anglican Church, Sorrento
Sorrento Subscription Concerts (Oz Classique Concerts)

Tuesday, 20 April 1999, 8 pm
Xavier College Chapel, Kew.
Subscription Concert 1

PROGRAM

Robert Wylkinson Salve regina
John Taverner Missa Corona spinea
Thomas Tallis Miserere nostri, Domine
Christopher Tye Omnes gentes plaudite
Robert White Miserere nostri, Domine
Osbert Parsley Conserva me, Domine
William Byrd Quomoda cantabimus?

SOPRANO ALTO TENOR BASS
Deborah Summerbell Jenny George Peter Campbell James Scott
Carol Veldhoven Margaret Arnold Peter Neustupny Philip Nicholls
Margaret Pearce Jennifer Mathers Stuart Tennant Andrew Fysh
Claerwen Jones Barbara Tattam Frank Prain Grantley McDonald
Maria Pisani Jerzy Kozlowski
Helen Gagliano


REVIEWS

Friday, 23 April 1999, The Herald Sun [Melbourne], page 78.
Striking a chord
Johanna Selleck

AFTER last year’s perusal of choral treasures from Renaissance Italy, Melbourne’s very own vocal treasure
Ensemble Gombert opened their l999 season in Tudor England.
In Tuesday evening’s celebration of the “glories of English polyphony”, the choir filled the Xavier College
Chapel with that ethereal, floating resonance that is their hallmark.
The elaborate melismas in both Robert Wylkynson’s Salve regina and John Tavener’s Missa Corona spinea
were like luminous golden threads weaving through a rich tapestry of sound.
Ensemble Gombert unravelled them with sensitivity and shapeliness.
The same works present a shining variety of textures and vocal combinations, however the sparser moments
entail hidden traps, often leaving the individual parts unsympathetically exposed.
Occasionally the upper voices did not achieve the pure, uncontaminated amalgam that they so often do.
At times the mix would also have benefited from a more solid presence from the tenors.
After interval Thomas Tallis’ seven-part canon Miserere nostri, Domine and Christopher Tye’s five-part motet
Omnes gentes plaudie achieved a crystalline clarity.
The points of imitation were pronounced definitively and likewise in William Byrd’s eight-part motet
Quomodo cantabimus the canonic writing was tightly construed and well balanced.
The program included Conserva me, Domine by the innocuously named Osbert Parsley, and Robert White’s
splendid yet sombre Miserere mei, Deus.
Ensemble Gombert display that rare ability to extract the purest essence from the music they perform, and
strike a common chord (psychologically speaking) in all of us.
This is timeless music, which speaks directly to the soul of humanity.
For this reason, and for the uncompromising, consistently high standard that they deliver, Ensemble Gombert
has built up a loyal and devoted following.
There are four more concerts to go in the series, including “Gombert and his contemporaries”, “Lassus and
his heritage” and “Three high Renaissance requiems”.

Christmas to Candlemas (1998)

Tuesday 15 December 1998 at 8pm
Wednesday 16 December at 8pm

Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 5


PROGRAM

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Dies sanctificatus a 4
Lapidabant Stephanum a 4
Hic est disciplinus ille a 5
Innocentes pro Christe a 4
O admirabile commercium a 5
Reges Tharsis a 5
Senex puerum portabat a 5
Nunc dimittus a 12
Hodie Christus natus est a 8
Missa Hodie Christus natus est a 8


SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Claerwen Jones
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano
Alto
Bernadette Ballard
Jennifer George
Margaret Arnold
Barbara Tattam
Tenor
Stuart Tennant
Frank Prain
Andrew Green
Philip Legge
Bass
Julian Liberto
Tom Henry
Thomas Drent
Andrew Fysh

REVIEW

Monday 21 December, The Age [Melbourne], page 16.
The year of the Italians
Joel Crotty

Ensemble Gombert’s final offering for 1998 was an all-Palestrina affair, the last in a series of events that have
focussed on Italian Renaissance music.
We have investigated the political life of Florence and Venice through the music of Dufay and Giovanni
Gabrieli, respectively. Moreover, the experimentalism of Gesualdo and Josquin added a colorful dimension to
the season.
As we draw to the close of the 20th century, it is pleasing to know that in the West we have become a
population of musical detectives.
In previous centuries, many Renaissance composers, such as Gesualdo, were buried under the weight of
subsequent musical epochs. It seems almost unthinkable today that Josquin could have been dismissed by
generations of singers as an irrelevancy.
Conversely, Palestrina’s star has only slightly dimmed this century, due in part to musicologists recovering
the other master composers from his time. Nowadays Palestrina is competing for attention in the sprawl that
is music history.
How Palestrina remained such a dominant force in Western music for such a long time is certainly open to
debate. None the less, he was championed by the Catholic Church for centuries because of his conservative
compositional principles.
He wrote music that was restrained and emotionally balanced, and as a consequence, more than adequately
fulfilled the church’s requirements.
His music, however, did not stand the test of time just because he appeased the church hierarchy. Pedagogues
have used his brilliant, though ridged, contrapuntal structures as examples of excellence.
As with all Gombert concerts, John O’Donnell, the choir’s artistic director, programmed the Palestrina event
to explore a range of the composer’s output.
O’Donnell divided the concert into two halves. The first section was concerned with music associated with
some of the festivals within the Christmas to Candlemas period, roughly December to February. In the notes,
he guided us through the archaic rituals with the music as signposts.
This half was almost uniformly good, with only a few wayward spots of minor concern in Innocentes pro
Christe and Reges Tharsis. However, it was the 12-part complexity of Nunc dimittis that was the highlight of the night. And it was the work they also encored.
O’Donnell rearranged the voices on the stage to create a fresh blend and successfully enlivened the
soundscape. Moreover, this revised acoustic base revealed a solid accuracy in the delivery of the musical
lines. It was an example of the glorious purity that Gombert’s 17 voices were capable of obtaining on the
night.
However, the tight ensemble bond seemed to periodically desert them during Missa Hodie Christus natus est.
This difficult finale to the concert realised a few pitching problems and tentative attacks. The Credo, in
particular, seemed to test them in the maintenance of a unified front.
Ensemble Gombert’s 1999 season will be held once again in the Xavier College Chapel. In that space we will
encounter music from English and Franco-Flemish composers such as Byrd and Lassus. After a year with the
Italians, the next series will be positively multicultural.
Joel Crotty/Courtesy of The Age

 

Friday 18 December 1998, The Age [Melbourne], page 81.
Choral singing’s Renaissance
Johanna Selleck

MELBOURNE has had a “golden age” for unaccompanied choral singing since
Ensemble Gombert began their subscription series four years ago.
The group specialises in Franco-Flemish music of the High Renaissance, but their 1998 season has taken
followers through the rich, colorful Italian Renaissance.
Their final concert for the year was devoted to Palestrina and the sacred works he composed for major feast
days between Christmas and Candlemas (February 2).
Like manna from heaven, Palestrina’s music provided the Catholic church with the perfect antidote to the
“lascivious” music of the time. To inspire the congregation to serious spiritual contemplation, they sought to
purge it from unnecessary complexity and display.
As Ensemble Gombert demonstrated in motets such as O Admirabile Commercium, Palestrina’s music fitted
the bill perfectly.
The clarity and purity of style were tastefully exposed, with a balance between mystical elements and a sense
of grandeur.
A rare moment of insecurity occurred briefly in the upper parts of the motet Innocentes pro Christe.
Otherwise the delivery was confident and precise.
In the Missa Hodie Christus natus est, one of Palestrina’s four parody masses for double choir, the ensemble
traced the wonderfully proportioned contours while maintaining the plasticity of line. The full gamut of
emotions from joy to peaceful meditation was revealed.
Highlight of the first half was undoubtedly the splendid 12-part Nunc Dimittis. Gombert maintained a lucid
transparency of texture, despite the complexity of parts.
The final Amen echoed resplendently in every alcove of the Xavier College Chapel, making it the ideal
choice for final encore.
The group’s ability to achieve such full-bodied sonorities is one of the most enjoyable aspects of their
performances.

J.S Bach St John Passion (1998)

Tuesday 15 September 1998
St Patrick’s Cathedral, East Melbourne

Melbourne Early Music Festival
With Concentus Australis

PROGRAM

Johann Sebastian Bach St John Passion


Gerald English, Evangelist
Margaret Pearce, Soprano
David V Russell, Alto
Adrian Dwyer, Tenor
Michael Leighton Jones, Bass
Stephen Grant, Jesus

Choir members unknown

REVIEW

Friday 18 September, The Herald Sun [Melbourne], page 38.
Bach an inspired first night choice
Johanna Selleck

ST Patrick’s Cathedral echoed to the immortal strains of Bach’s St John Passion on Tuesday.
Though this work was the master’s earliest essay in the genre, it was written at the height of his artistic
powers.
An inspired and all-encompassing expression of deepest humanity, it provided exactly the sort of direct and
vivid statement that was needed to make an impact on the opening night of the Early Music Festival.
The team of soloists, the orchestra of Concentus Australis and the choir of Ensemble Gombert gelled under
the expert direction of John O’Donnell. In particular, the graphic realism of Bach’s setting was captured by
Gerald English’s animated, incisive delivery as the Evangelist.
His narration was powerfully offset by Stephen Grant’s mellow portrayal of Jesus, and by some excellent
characterisations on the part of soprano Margaret Pearce, alto David Russell, tenor Adrian Dwyer and bass
Michael Leighton Jones.
Bach employs distinctive instrumental groupings to color the mood of individual arias. Flutes are made to
melt sensuously into the soaring soprano lines, or the tenor voice is cushioned by sombre, softly spoken
strings and organ.
These moments were captured sensitively by Concentus Australis on period instruments. The silken
sonorities of the baroque instruments blend with a subtlety not possible on modern equivalents.
While the orchestra maintained an air of rapt solemnity and pathos, the choir battled to make their presence
felt in the resonant cathedral acoustic which disseminated the sound all too effectively.
Consequently, the dramatic choruses lacked solidity and definition, not because of lack of choral expertise,
but the need for larger forces, given the surroundings.
The festival continues until Sunday with a diverse program that is sure to please connoisseur and ordinary
listener alike.

Friday 18 September, The Australian [Sydney], page 17. (extract)
Unlikely duo lifts the class
Jeremy Vincent

This year’s Melbourne Early Music Festival kicked off with a carefully delivered performance of Bach’s St John Passion in St Patrick’s Cathedral. O’Donnell’s diligent approach to his art mustered a decidedly sedate and proper reading, featuring Concentus Australis, the Ensemble Gombert choir and a group of fine soloists.
The venue was rather too large for an ideal balance. All credit, then, to the conductor for taming the
musicians enough to allow the choir plenty of show. The soloists were generally in good form, although a couple struggled to communicate their lower notes, especially as the acoustic tended to turn the continuo into almost a growling accompaniment.

 

Florentia/Firenze: home of the Medici (1998)

Tuesday 9 June 1998
Xavier College Chapel, Barkers Rd, Kew

Subscription Concert 3

PROGRAM

Guillaume Dufay(c. 1400-1474)
Nuper rosarum flores

Mirandas parit haec urbs florentina

Salve flos Tuscae gentis Florentia
Heinrich Isaac  (c. 1450-1517) 
Quis dabit capito meo aquam?

Missa Salva nos
Philippe Verdelot (c. 1470/80-c. 1530/40)
Laetamini in Domino

Congregati sunt
Recordare, Domine
In te, Domine, speravi
Alessandro Striggio  (1535-1592)  Ecce beatam lucem a 40

SINGERS

Soprano
Deborah Summerbell
Carol Veldhoven
Maria Pisani
Helen Gagliano
Alto
Bernadette Ballard
Jennifer Mathers
Margaret Arnold
Barbara Tattam
Tenor
Frank Prain
Peter Neustupny
Phillip Legge
Stuart Tennant
Bass
Philip Nicholls
Tom Henry
Thomas Drent
Jerzy Kozlowski


Additional singers for the Striggio:

Soprano: Nina Pereira, Sally Watt, Jane Phillips, Claerwen Jones, Margaret Pearce
Alto: Niki Ebacioni, Helena Simpson, Fiona Furphy, Christopher Field
Tenor: Joel Gladman, Vaughan McAlley, Matthew Flood, Paul Norbury, Ben Owen, Simon Biazeck,
Bass: John Weretka, Richard Pyros, Johnathan Wallis, Adrian Barrett, Sam Furphy, Julian Liberto, Alexander Macrae, Charles Pinkham

REVIEWS
Tuesday 16 June 1998, The Age [Melbourne], page 18.
The joys of travel
Joel Crotty

Cultural tourism has become big business in Australia. Tour operators are developing packages for people
with large disposable incomes to travel to the Old World’s opera houses and concert halls and hear music by
the great masters.
A far cheaper, though no less a rewarding, experience has been Ensemble Gombert’s current season under the
umbrella title of An Italian Year. So far, we have explored the Renaissance courts of Venosa, via the music of
Gesualdo, and Ferrera, with reference to scores primarily by Josquin Desprez.
At Tuesday’s concert, we travelled to Florence and witnessed the grand style of Dufay, Isaac, Verdelot and
Alessandro Striggio. The brief trip through 125 years of Florentine musical history was vivid.
The concert opened and closed with what could be termed architectural music, but from vastly different
approaches. In musicological circles, Dufay’s Nuper rosarum flores is probably one of the most discussed
works from the Renaissance. With incredible imagination, the composer conceived a score based on
isorhythmic proportions that corresponded precisely to the structure of the cathedral, Santa Maria del Fiore.
The choir produced a rich sound that belied, at every level, the score’s mathematical formulations.
At the other end of the evening was Alessandro Striggio’s Ecco beatum lucem for 40 parts. As the ensemble’s
artistic director John O’Donnell points out in the notes, there are only a couple of extant scores from the
Renaissance encompassing such mammoth sonic mapping. The 16 voices of Gombert were joined by a
further 24 choristers, forming a large circle in keeping with the original performance practice for this piece.
Parading in this manner forces the sound inwards, then up and out. The clarity is thus less discernible from
the outside and mistakes easier to conceal. While a few dubious happenings were clearly evident, the
performers, on the whole, maintained a cohesion that, under the circumstances of numerous independent
lines, was commendable. O’Donnell was obviously happy with the rendition, for he rotated the singers 180
degrees and gave us a repeat performance. Striggio’s spectacle was an interesting aside, but hardly great
music. None the less, this compositional byway would rarely receive an airing here if not for Ensemble
Gombert.
More important to the quality (as opposed to the quantity) of the concert was Isaacs’ Quis dabit capito meo
aquam? and Missa La Spagna. These works highlighted Isaac’s masterly understanding of word-painting and
contrapuntal layering.
In Quis dabit, written as a lament on the death of Lorenzo de Medici, the choir was able to transmit all the
emotional content with a deft sensibility. The same level of exquisite attention to detail was not always
forthcoming in the mass.
However, for the most part, they presented the work with refined balance and beautifully clear phrasing,
particularly in the compact Credo. Unlike most cultural tourists, we left the site not with photographs, but
with snatches of music we will periodically recall until the ensemble’s Italian expedition recommences in
November.
Joel Crotty/Courtesy of The Age

Friday 12 June 1998, The Herald Sun [Melbourne], page 86.
Past is given voice
Xenai Hanusiak

THE Melbourne musical community is fortunate to have a music scholar of the calibre of John O’Donnell.
His chamber choir, the Ensemble Gombert, represents the results of his considerable and dedicated
musicological qualifications.
The ensemble specialises in authentic performance practice, in particular the music of the Renaissance and
early baroque.
The third concert of the 1998 subscription series, An Italian Year, focused on music composed for Florence.
In this very satisfying program we heard secular and religious works by the Frenchman Dufay, two
Netherlanders, Isaac and Verdelot, and the lesser known Italian composer Striggio.
In all offerings the Ensemble Gombert expertly performed the works with the stylistic accuracy we have
come to expect.
In a set of Dufay motets the flowing, song-like quality was evident.
Furthermore, there remained throughout a seamlessness in timbre.
The leading voice was supported by the two supporting instrumental voices with controlling influence.
In Missa salva nos by Heinrich Isaac, the choir brought out the harmonic richness of the score and maintained
a rhythmic verve.
Each inner section of the Ensemble Gombert is beginning to develop a distinctive quality: the sopranos
remain sweet and lucid, bringing an almost childlike quality to the ensemble, the altos caress the note with a
consistently musical approach, and the basses underpin the ensemble with a similar warmth.
The tenors, who in the present line-up possibly represent the youngest members, produce a reedy quality.
As a special treat, the Ensemble Gombert was joined by 24 extra singers to perform the rarely heard Ecce
beatam lucem by Striggio, scored for 40 vocal lines. The enlarged ensemble sang the work in a full circle.
The piece was received with so much enthusiasm it was performed twice.
It was refreshing to watch the young recruits sing with so much obvious excitement.
It is also satisfying to know they have a choir such as the Ensemble Gombert to aspire to.