It's a nice phrase, certainly, but I can't say that it strikes me as exceptional. Browne's music is full of graceful, arch-shaped phrases. In his O Maria salvatoris mater, for example, he also shows great control of the texture, which is at least the equal of any composer of the period.
Choral Vespers - Chapel Royal of Hampton Court Palace Wed, 30th March 2016
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View Post...The Crucifige in Browne's Stabat mater is such a unique blip for its time that I wonder whether it was intentional...
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A wonderful service, if somewhat overburdened with English in its spoken parts.
And what was the National Anthem doing there? Shouldn't it have been something like Domine, salvam fac reginam nostram... if it's properly there at all?
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Nevilevelis
I thought this New Rite Vespers was pretty unremarkable apart form the Cornysh. I wasn't aware that one could sing an introit before the Deus in adjutorium meum, but there we are!
Plainsong too slow; most of it over-punctilious and lacking flow and forward motion. Too stunted for my taste. A couple of basses managed to egregiously leave the sound flapping on final notes. Really not convincing, despite the obviously high level of musicianship.
They sounded more at home in the polyphony, which is to be expected.
I wonder if the inclusion of the National Anthem is a nod to a tradition of the place. Wolsey?
NVV.
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Have to agree with a lot of the above.
The singers sounded just a bit uncomfortable until the Cornysh. Even the Tallis was a bit ordinary.
I mean - am I right? - as a group, they don't usually sing at services, do they?
And the very close acoustic didn't suit them all that well either. Yes, I know that that is where that kind of music / service would have been held, but.....
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Originally posted by jean View PostI don't see how it can possibly not have been intentional - unless Browne didn't actually understand the Latin he was setting.
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Originally posted by jean View PostCertainly John Browne's tunes are astonishingly...tuneful - especially in the Stabat Mater!
I suppose it could be argued that they don't particularly express the words they set.
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostOr it simply didn't occur to him (or to any other English composer) that music might have some function in interpreting the text.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostMaybe that's what I should have said on another thread a while back, when I astounded (astonished?) you by saying that I found the piece too cheerful!My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View PostI'm not sure that the function of liturgical music then was to interpret the text, at least not in the sense that we might use that word today. Rather, it was to draw the listener to the contemplation of higher things. How exactly would one interpret musically the text of one of the more laudatory Marian antiphons, for example?Last edited by Vox Humana; 31-03-16, 22:49.
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Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View PostIt is true that there is sometimes an obvious mismatch, at least to our way of thinking, between the mood of the text and that of the music. Browne's Stabat virgo mater Christi, which sets one of the most excoriating texts in the Eton Choirbook, is in a disconcertingly major 'tonality'.
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Just to say I enjoyed the Sixteen at Hampton Court very much. Just picking up a few points from the threads above:
Plainsong: One needs to sing a whole lot of it regularly for it to become natural and not stilted.
The National Anthem: No complaints....but it did seem strangely out of place.
Cornysh: I agree very much with Vox. His lines seems to look forward to the assured style of the High Renaissance, whilst Fayrfax (an approx. contemporary) still has a whiff of the Medieval. That's a rather crude way of putting it. Anyway the Salve Regina, a substantial piece, was terrific.
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Magnificat
Originally posted by jean View PostA wonderful service, if somewhat overburdened with English in its spoken parts.
And what was the National Anthem doing there? Shouldn't it have been something like Domine, salvam fac reginam nostram... if it's properly there at all?
I don't know whether the National Anthem was properly there. As suggested in another post it may be a tradition of the Chapel Royal.
Perhaps, however, Byrd's 'Lord Make Thy Servant Elizabeth Our Queen To Rejoice In Thy Strength' would have been a more acceptable replacement in this service, Byrd having been a pupil of Tallis in The Chapel Royal. Not in Latin but a suitable prayer for our own Queen Elizabeth with which to end the service nevertheless.
VCC.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post[Cornysh's] lines seems to look forward to the assured style of the High Renaissance, whilst Fayrfax (an approx. contemporary) still has a whiff of the Medieveal. That's a rather crude way of putting it...
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