Melanie P. from COPPERAS COVE, TX Reviewed on 8/7/2006...
Elizabethan English church music, vocal/instrumental, program booklet includes notes in English/Francais/Deutsch/Italiano.
CD Reviews
Very well done Anglican sacred music
Concert Music | Alpharetta, GA USA | 03/16/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This disc offers the Tallis Scholars singing in English - a rare occassion in itself, and made very worthwhile by the beauty of Byrd's Great Service. The music found on this disc - the Great Service in 6 parts, plus 3 anthems - is quite different from the Catholic masses one is used to hearing from the Tallis Scholars, but represents a wonderful contrast to the pre-Reformation work more often heard from them.To my ears, the music sung here is somewhat less complicated than much of the Latin work of Byrd or Tallis, which I understand is partially due to the Anglican church's writ about making sacred music easier to digest. One of the benefits found in this is the fact that the listener will be able to follow along without the benefit of the text being provided.As an introduction to early Anglican music, this CD stands up well to the task. As an addition to a library of works by Byrd or the Tallis Scholars, it adds a bit of spice and makes for an hour of lovely listening enjoyment."
How can it be anything less?
J. C Clark | Overland Park, KS United States | 02/07/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The previous reviewer gives a glowing review, using words I associate with a five star review, then gives it four. How? This is transcendental music, simple and clean, to be sure, with a minimum of polyphony, but exquisitly sung and resonating with wonderful acoustics. Byrd can, to my ears, get a little tiresome, but there is nothing tiresome in this. Majestic, stately, choral music that will transport you to a beautiful world. Turn it up and sit back. Float away. It is exquisite."
Great in all respects...
FrKurt Messick | Bloomington, IN USA | 06/11/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"--William Byrd--
William Byrd was a composer of grace and power. A staunch Catholic in an increasingly Protestant country, Byrd maintained his church loyalties at high cost. However, as a recognised genius at liturgical music, he had powerful admirers and friends, perhaps including Queen Elizabeth herself. Producing musical settings to Latin texts in a new-regime English-dominated church environment took courage. However, Byrd persevered all his life to produce music that remains timeless while being firmly rooted in its time.--The Great Service--
'Great' in the sense here meant 'large' rather than 'excellent' or 'wonderful', but it nonetheless deserves the latter descriptions too. There are six movements in the Great Service, parts of the services of Matins, Evensong and Communion in the Anglican tradition. It does not have more common mass parts of Kyrie, Sanctus and Agnus Dei. This is scored for MAATB, but in fact shifted to make use of many voices at different times in the progress. This piece held true to the developing Protestant ideal of clarity in lyrics for meaningful hearing. --Other pieces--
As an added bonus, the Tallis Scholars have provided three English anthems by Byrd, 'O Lord, make thy servant Elizabeth', 'O God, the proud are risen', 'Sing joyfully unto God'. The first is scored MAATB, and the other two MMAATB. 'Sing joyfully' is probably Byrd's best anthem, jubilant and astonishing. Byrd, together with Tallis (from whom this ensemble derives its name), was considered a master of the English anthem.--Liner Notes--
Being internationally acclaimed, the Tallis Scholars' CDs typically present their commentary and texts in English, French, German and Italian (together with any Latin texts); that is true of this disc. The cover art also typically represents visual arts contemporary with the compositions - here it is one of the famous portraits from the National Portrait Gallery of Queen Elizabeth, who was a contemporary of William Byrd.--The Tallis Scholars--
The Tallis Scholars, a favourite group of mine since the first time I heard them decades ago, are a group dedicated to the performance and preservation of the best of this type of music. A choral group of exceptional ability, I have been privileged to see them many times in public, and at almost every performance, their singing seems almost like a spiritual epiphany for me, one that defies explanation in words. Directed by Peter Phillips, the group consists of a small number of male and female singers who have trained themselves well to their task.Their recordings are of a consistent quality that deserve more than five stars; this particular disc of pieces by Byrd deserves a place on the shelf of anyone who loves choral music, liturgical music or Gregorian chant, classical music generally, or religious music. It is astonishing. The music on this disc was originally recorded in 1987 at the Church of St. John in Hackney, London."