Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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An extreme example of discrete voices might be the polytextual motets of the middle ages, whose voices often sound almost as if they belong to different pieces that just happened to land together in this interwoven state.
But my point (or Penderecki's, rather) was to do with polyphony being idiomatic to vocal-ensemble music - where, indeed, it seems to have its European historical origins.
I'd usually rather have the vocal ensemble option, but here is one piece which to me is very obviously a consort song, though Byrd himself seems to have envisaged the vocal ensemble version, the second of these:
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