But, apart from that ...
Eton Choir Book - Huelgas - Sat 7th Feb 1pm
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Postbut as you hint, slight variations in dynamics and tempo help to make (what is for some) slightly arcane music more accessible. In some ways bringing music to life will always transcend the mere dots on the paper.
I noticed the same effect on their CD: this phrase a little faster, this one a little slower. All of this draws attention to the performance of the music (rather than the music itself) in a way that I don't think was originally intended. I think the music's orignal function within the liturgy was to draw the minds of those present to the contemplation of higher things; it wasn't 'listened to' in the modern sense.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Your point taken. Perhaps better-known Palestrina makes my point. Used liturgically (as a few Masses, e.g. Papae Marcelli, Missa Brevis, are in Anglican cathedrals) it's great to let the phrases sing out for themselves in an acoustic they were designed for. However in a concert setting, it is being 'listened to', and when you include the Credo (often omitted in today's church use), one does feel the urge to vary the pace a bit and to do some dynamic contrasts. Incidentally, the most exciting performance of the Tallis Lamentations I and II which I took part in was brilliantly directed to sweep the audience along with its meaning. Each Hebrew letter was sung slowly and solemnly, but each succeeding verse brought something different and expressive. You would most likely have hated it! But we did 'engage' a vast audience in a vast Abbey.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWhatever one performs, it's a good if unfashionable idea to help the audience to enjoy it. I think you know that's what I meant![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostWhat stands out for me about the ECB is what it tells us about the amazing skills of ALL the singers for whom it must have been written. Youi don ;t go on writing liturgical music for teams who can't negotiate it. And the demands made by the scores are pretty intense.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostWhat stands out for me about the ECB is what it tells us about the amazing skills of ALL the singers for whom it must have been written. Youi don ;t go on writing liturgical music for teams who can't negotiate it. And the demands made by the scores are pretty intense.
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One factor in the emergence of choristers sufficiently skilled to sing polyphony this was the simplifying of musical notation. Things like the fearsome proportions and the use of two or three different colours found in the Old Hall manuscript had all but disappeared by the time Eton was copied. Yes, there are a few passages in major prolation with half-coloured notes and some quite complex proportional notation, but these are only found in the pieces for men's voices or in the lower voices of full-choir works. The music boys are required to sing in pieces like Browne's Stabat mater may be difficult, but its notation is comparatively straightforward.
I was fortunate enough to be introduced to Andrew Parrott recently and had an extremely interesting conversation with him about, amongst other things, music from the Eton Choirbook. Apparently he has a large article about this and other choir-related matters coming out in the next issue of the journal Early Music, which I'm looking forward to reading. His recording of Browne's Stabat mater and O Maria salvatoris mater were what got me interested in this music in the first place.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View PostI was fortunate enough to be introduced to Andrew Parrott recently and had an extremely interesting conversation with him about, amongst other things, music from the Eton Choirbook. Apparently he has a large article about this and other choir-related matters coming out in the next issue of the journal Early Music, which I'm looking forward to reading. His recording of Browne's Stabat mater and O Maria salvatoris mater were what got me interested in this music in the first place.
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Originally posted by Gabriel Jackson View PostThis sounds very interesting. That Browne/Carver/Taverner disc remains, for me, one of the greatest recordings of that repertoire (and the Taverner Missa Gloria Tibi Trinitis disc and the two Tallis discs are wonderfully persuasive too).My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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