One of the most astounding recordings I've ever heard
Robert | Pasadena, CA | 02/07/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Impossible to describe, this sets a new standard of excellence. The performance is flawless and utterly convincing."
The Fittest Don't Always Survive
Giordano Bruno | Wherever I am, I am. | 10/26/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Cappella Pratensis was simultaneously the most scrupulous of choirs in terms of mean-temperament, historical pronunciation, and prolation, yet very bold and "spiritual" in affect. Apparently they're extinct, since none of their CDs are available on amazon currently. I searched for this recording of Ockeghem because it has been one of my favorites and I wanted another copy to send to a friend. But! There are samples available on amazon, minute-long fragments, well worth listening to as examples of what a choir should do to make sense of Renaissance polyphony. The chief virtue is precision of attacks -- consonants, when you get down to it -- which in turn makes possible the rhetorical independence of each vocal line of the polyphony, which in another turn makes the intense horizontal rhythmic progression of the music audible. A big fat luscious choral timbre is the enemy, and that's why skillful one-on-a-part performances are usually superior. Pratensis offered a bit of the best of both worlds. I'm sorry they perished. Fellow buyers, let's all unite in demanding a re-issue!"