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ResMusica
By using a choir of mixed voices which are so well balanced, Peter Phillips is able to bring to light inflections of sound which are not available to ensembles formed only of male voices.
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Early Music America
one of the precious few creators whose output never falls short of the extraordinary
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American Record Guide
Not a moment seems squandered. They reveal the nuance of Josquin's genius at every turn.
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Diapason
This disc sings, shines, plays. Great art.
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Classic FM Magazine
...miss a single note and you're all the poorer. An essential buy from a team who never put a note wrong. Classic Fm Magazine Editor's Choice.
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Musicweb
The singing of The Tallis Scholars is flawless. Yet that description should not for one second imply anything cold or academic. These are vital performances that bring Josquin’s music vividly to life. The listener is engaged right from the start and consistently drawn onwards and into the music.
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BBC Radio 3 - CD Review
There should always be a special place for this high flown perfection and the sense of timelessness it evokes.
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International Record Review
...finds Josquin at his most inventive and his most inspired. As does this recording by The Tallis Scholars.
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The Observer
This exceptional ensemble makes it sound effortless, with impeccable tuning and evenness of tone.
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Did The Tallis Scholars ever make a bad recording?


05 September 2012
Audiophile Audition
Steven Ritter

The Tallis Scholars are hands down the most difficult performing ensemble in the world to review. The reason is simple - they have been around for so many years and have produced such a consistent and high quality product, both on record and in the concert hall, that there is simply little to say about them anymore except "bring it on!"

Both of these canonic masses are based on plainchant themes, and De beate virgine is most likely Josquin's most-performed mass, indeed probably the most-performed mass in the entire Renaissance period, with fully 69 disseminations, making it the most widely propagated work of its time. But the work is not a model of thematic unity, using different themes according to the different movements and becoming a slave to the liturgical texts. But the canons used are some of the most inventive he ever penned.

To the contrary, Ave maris stella presents the chant melody in a beautiful showcase, always easily understood and clearly discernible, with its eminent cohesion making it an easy choice for modern choirs.

The Chapel at Merton College in Oxford provides fine acoustics for the many felicities of the Tallis Scholars' stirring renditions - add another winner to the Gimell catalog.

Read the full review on Audiophile Audition.






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