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Gimell CD Quality Downloads offer identical quality to the original Compact Discs. Before you place an order please use our Test Files to check compatibility with your system.

You can burn these files to CD or play them from your computer but we strongly recommend that you listen using a Network Music Player connected to your Hi-fi system.

PCs - Our CD Quality WMA Downloads can be imported into Windows Media Player and into the Windows version of iTunes. iTunes will convert the files when you import them; to avoid loss of quality please select 'Import using Apple Lossless Format' in the iTunes menu at 'Edit - Preferences - Advanced -  Importing'.

MACs - Apple will not allow us to sell Downloads in the Apple Lossless format. The only Gimell Downloads that will import directly into iTunes on a Mac are MP3s, however other programmes are available for the Mac that will reproduce our CD Quality, Studio Master and Studio Master Pro FLAC Downloads. If you have access to a PC you can convert our WMA files into Apple Lossless using the Windows version of iTunes and then copy the files to your MAC. Alternatively you can use Soundfile Conversion Software such as Switch to convert our FLAC files to the Apple Lossless format.

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Tracks to Sample and Download

Track Time Listen Price
1

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Kyrie

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Kyrie

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
7:02 Play $3.18
2

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Gloria

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Gloria

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
9:33 Play $3.18
3

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Credo

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Credo

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
9:42 Play $3.18
4

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Sanctus & Benedictus

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Sanctus & Benedictus

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
14:04 Play $4.77
5

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Agnus Dei

Missa Et ecce terrae motus - Agnus Dei

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
6:45 Play $3.18
6

Lamentations

Lamentations

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
9:03 Play $3.18
7

Magnificat secundi toni

Magnificat secundi toni

Composer Antoine Brumel (c.1450-c.1520)
Conductor Peter Phillips
16:47 Play $6.36
Total Playing Time  72:56 Purchase all tracks  $15.99

Antoine Brumel - Missa Et ecce terrae motus (The Earthquake Mass)

The Tallis Scholars

CDGIM 026

Total Playing Time 72:56

There is nothing comparable to Brumel's Earthquake Mass in the renaissance period and this recording featuring 24 carefully selected voices from the UK and beyond caused quite a stir when it was first released.
It is hard to think of any other piece of music quite like the 12-part 'Earthquake' Mass by Antoine Brumel (c.1460-c.1520). Both in its employment of twelve voices for almost its entire length and in its musical effects, there is nothing comparable to it in the renaissance period, even if some of those effects may remind the listener of the 40-part motet Spem in alium (1) by Thomas Tallis (c.1505-1585). Brumel's masterpiece did not inaugurate a fashion for massive compositions; but it did quickly establish a formidable reputation for itself, admired throughout central Europe in the 16th century as an experiment which could not easily be repeated. It is tribute enough that the only surviving source was copied in Munich under the direct supervision of the late renaissance composer Orlandus Lassus (1532-1594), who nonetheless never tried to rival its idiom in his own work.

A pupil of Josquin des Prés (c.1440-1521) and one of the leading Franco-Flemish composers around 1500, Brumel was famous throughout the 16th century. In a period which has left a large number of laments in memory of its great composers, Brumel received an exceptional number, more than Obrecht (c.1450-1505), Mouton (c.1459-1522) and Agricola (?1446-1506) put together. Thomas Morley (in A Plain and Easy Introduction to Practical Music, 1597) was probably the last writer to praise Brumel for his skill, the only master he ranked alongside Josquin, making particular reference to his ability in the art of canonic composition. Brumel is important to modern commentators because he was one of the few leading members of the Franco-Flemish school to be genuinely French, which is to say that he was born outside the boundaries of the Burgundian Empire, somewhere near Chartres. He was initially employed in France proper at the Cathedrals of Chartres and Laon and (in 1498) at Notre Dame in Paris where he was responsible for the education of the choirboys. However he seems to have had a restless temperament, which led to his dismissal on at least two occasions, and he soon began the peripatetic life of so many musicians of the renaissance period. There is evidence that he was employed in Geneva, Chambéry and probably Rome; but the high-point of his career was the fifteen years he spent as successor to Josquin and Obrecht at the court of Ferrara (between 1505 and 1520) in the retinue of Alfonso d'Este I.

Brumel's reputation as a writer of canons would not have been greatly increased by the simple example which underlies the Missa Et ecce terrae motus, for all that the presence of the canon plays an important role in understanding the unusual musical style of the whole. Brumel restricted his quotation of the Easter plainsong antiphon at Lauds, Et ecce terrae motus, to its first seven notes (which set the seven syllables of its title to D-D-B-D-E-D-D), working them in three-part canon between the third bass and the first two tenor parts during some of the Mass's 12-part passages. These statements occur in very long notes compared with the surrounding activity and their details may vary slightly from quotation to quotation (for example, which of the three voices begins and what the interval between them may be). By and large, though, the realisation of this canonic scaffolding is not rigorous and many of the sections of the mass are free of canon altogether.

However the influence of these slow-moving notes can be heard throughout the work, whether they are actually there or not, in the solid, slow-changing underlying chords. A casual listener to the Missa Et ecce terrae motus, confused at first by the teeming detail of the rhythmic patterns, may hear only some rather disappointing harmonies. Closer listening will reveal why Brumel chose to write in so many parts: he needed them to decorate his colossal harmonic pillars. In doing so he effectively abandoned polyphony in the sense of independent yet interrelated melodic lines, and resorted to sequences and figurations which were atypical of his time. The effect can even be akin to that of Islamic art: static, non-representational, tirelessly inventive in its use of abstract designs, which are intensified by their repetitive application. This style of writing is so effective that anyone who might be reminded of Tallis's Spem in alium would be unable to conceive of the need for another 28 parts.

The manuscript source for Brumel's 'Earthquake' Mass (Munich Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Mus. MS1) was copied for a performance in about 1570 at the Bavarian court. The names of the 33 court singers are given against the nine lower parts (the boys are not named), amongst whom Lassus sang Tenor II. Unfortunately the last folios, which contain the Agnus Dei, have rotted, leaving holes in the voice-parts. Any editor of the piece is presented with the unusual task of trying to guess where the notes which he can read might fit, as they are placed on the page in individual parts rather than in score; then re-compose what is missing. This was done for Gimell by Francis Knights. A further Agnus Dei, on the Et ecce terrae motus chant and attributed to Brumel, survives in Copenhagen; but it is widely thought not to belong to the 12-part Mass, since it is for six voices, which use different vocal ranges from those in the 12-part setting. In addition its musical style differs in various important respects from that of the larger work, not least in quoting many more than the first seven notes of the chant. For these reasons it has been omitted from this recording. The Mass is scored for three sopranos, one true alto, five wide-ranging tenors and three basses. The tessitura of all these parts (except perhaps that of the sopranos) is unpredictable to the point of eccentricity. Countertenor II, for example, has a range of two octaves and a tone, the widest vocal range I have ever met in renaissance music.

Such eccentricity is not found in the two remaining items on this recording, both scored for four voices. Brumel's only surviving set of Lamentations, one of the most beautiful in the repertory, is also one of the most sombre, building up a rare mood of desolation by low scoring and slow harmonic movement. As was customary, the Hebrew letters (in this case 'Heth' and 'Caph') are set separately from the main body of the text; less usual was the conception of the last section in triple time, though this suits rather well the accents in the word 'Ierusalem'. Like most of the music on this recording, though unusually for a Franco-Flemish composer of the period, there is little true counterpoint in the writing and no imitation. The intense, essentially chordal style rather reminds one of the music of the Spanish composer Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548-1611) of nearly a hundred years later. In this respect, as in the sequences to be found in the Mass and Magnificat, Brumel seems to have been in advance of his time.

Brumel's Second Tone Magnificat is a through-composed setting, where most would have alternated chant and polyphony. Its compositional style is surprisingly close to that of the 12-part Mass, except that the chant is stated mainly in the top part in embellished form. Brumel here again relied on rhythmical sequences, at times almost baroque in their vitality, which give an interesting perspective, in four parts, to the astonishing twelve-part music of the Mass.

© 1992 Peter Phillips

(1) Recorded on CDGIM 006
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14 May 2008
England
Saint Edmundsbury Cathedral, Bury St Edmunds

Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri Dominum
Victoria Lamentations for Maundy Thursday
Jackson O Doctor optime
Tavener Song for Athene
New Composition from a Festival Competition



20 May 2008
Italy
Chiesa di San Marcellino, Cremona
Palestrina Laudate Pueri Dominum
Ingegneri Missa Laudate Pueri Dominum
Cavalli Requiem

23 May 2008
England
Beverley Minster, Beverley
Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri Dominum
Victoria Lamentations for Maundy Thursday
Jackson O Doctor optime
Tavener Song for Athene
New Composition from a Festival Competition

11 June 2008
France
Chapelle de la Trinité, Lyon

Palestrina Laudate pueri dominum; Stabat Mater; Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri dominum
Allegri Miserere



12 June 2008
France
Chapelle de la Trinité, Lyon
Palestrina Stabat Mater; Magnificat for Double Choir
Ingegneri Missa Laudate pueri dominum
Allegri Miserere

28 June 2008
Spain
Catedral de Girona, Girona
Victoria Requiem; Vidi speciosam; Nigra sum; Salve regina (a 8)
Guerrero Hei domine, domine
Willaert Ave virgo
Obrecht Salve regina

22 July 2008
England
Royal Albert Hall, London
BBC Proms

Concert commences at 10pm.
Box office 020 7589 8212.
Promoter's website

Obrecht Missa 'Malheur me bat'
Josquin Missa 'Malheur me bat'



The Tallis Scholars directed by Peter Phillips

Soprano

Tessa Bonner (1-5); Sally Dunkley (1-5, 7); Ruth Holton (1-5); Rachel Platt (1-5); Deborah Roberts (1-5); Olive Simpson (1-5)

Mean

Robert Harre-Jones (1-5); Adrian Hill (1-5); Mike Lees (1-5); Nigel Short;

Ashley Stafford (1-5); Caroline Trevor

Tenor

Charles Daniels; Simon Davies (1-6); Rufus Müller; Mark Padmore; Nicolas Robertson (1-5); Angus Smith (1-5)

Bass

Stephen Charlesworth (1-5); Donald Greig; Jonathan Markham (1-5); Adrian Peacock (1-5); Francis Steele; Jeremy White (1-5)

 

Produced by Steve C Smith and Peter Phillips for Gimell Records.

Recording Engineers: Mike Clements and Mike Hatch. Recorded in the Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Salle, Norfolk, England.

The panel from The Last Judgement by Rogier van der Weyden (c.1400-1464) is reproduced by kind permission of the Hôtel-Dieu, Beaune, France. Photograph © Paul M. R. Maeyaert, Etikhove-Maarkedal, Belgium.

The edition for Missa Et ecce terrae motus is by Francis Knights and that for the Lamentations by Ivan Moody. Peter Phillips edited the Magnificat. All editions were specially prepared for Gimell Records.

The copyright in this sound recording, the notes, translations and visual designs, is owned by Gimell Records.

(P) 1992 Original sound recording made by Gimell Records.
© 1992 Gimell Records.




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