Doversoul always used to give us a nudge about what was coming up on RR. This post is retrospective, I'm afraid, but for anyone who loves the Dufay/Ockeghem period of Early Music, do have a listen to this:
Johannes Ockeghem
Aultre Venus estes sans faille
Choir: Blue Heron. Conductor: Scott Metcalfe
(about 13mins 30sec from start)
It is a chanson, and was beautifully (really beautifully) sung by a soprano and baritone. I was puzzled though. A harp was playing (obviously not prescribed by Ockeghem) and it seemed sometimes to be supplying a third part...including the occasion sharpened fourth of a 'Burgundian' cadence...by also sometimes being a sort of continuo-style filler, a concept not known at the time. Apparently there is some scholarly explanation in the accompanying CD booklet, but AMcG didn't see fit to enlarge on this. Does anyone know about this practice, or indeed about Blue Heron?
Johannes Ockeghem
Aultre Venus estes sans faille
Choir: Blue Heron. Conductor: Scott Metcalfe
(about 13mins 30sec from start)
It is a chanson, and was beautifully (really beautifully) sung by a soprano and baritone. I was puzzled though. A harp was playing (obviously not prescribed by Ockeghem) and it seemed sometimes to be supplying a third part...including the occasion sharpened fourth of a 'Burgundian' cadence...by also sometimes being a sort of continuo-style filler, a concept not known at the time. Apparently there is some scholarly explanation in the accompanying CD booklet, but AMcG didn't see fit to enlarge on this. Does anyone know about this practice, or indeed about Blue Heron?
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