MESSE DE MARIAGE
Henri IV et Marie de Médicis
Florence, 5 octobre / Lyon, 17 décembre 1600
Eustache Du Caurroy (1549-1609) (Texte
de Nicolas Rapin)
1 Pavane fait au mariage de Mr de Vandosme 2'23
2 Au Roy, valeureux guerrier 1'49
Stefano Bernardi (ca. 1575-1636)
3 Sinfonia à huit (Exultavit cor meum in Domino)
2'11
Eustache Du Caurroy (Texte de Nicolas
Rapin) 1'52
4 A la Royne, ninfe qui tient tant d'heur
Stefano Bernardi
5 Sinfonia à six (Sinfonia terza concertata) 2'17
Claude Lejeune (1528 ?-1600)
6 Epithalame à deux churs 12'48
Gioseffo (Giuseppe) Guami (ca. 1540 -
1611)
7 Muse honorons de ta chanson (Texte
déclamé)* 0'56
8 Pavane faite pour le mariage de Henry le Grand en 1600
2'32
Messe à double chur, Marco da Gagliano
(1582-1643)
9 Introït : Deus in loco sancto (plain
chant)** 3'15
10 Kyrie 4'16
11 Gloria 2'50
12 Credo 5'00
13 Offertoire Canzon a 8 voci 3'24
Stefano Bernardi
14 Sanctus 1'36
15 Elevatione a 4 voci / Luca Bati 2'08
16 Agnus Dei 3'25
17 Sinfonia a 8 (Fili ego Salomon) 1'38
Claude Lejeune
18 Te Deum 7'59
Ensemble Doulce
Mémoire
* par Thierry Peteau ** par Lucien Kandel
Julie Hassler, Véronique Bourin, sopranos
Marc Pontus, alto
Serge Goubioud, Lucien Kandel, ténors
Thierry Peteau, Emmanuel Vistorky, barytons
Philippe Roche, basse
Denis Raisin-Dadre, basson alto, flûte à bec ténor,
bombarde alto
Elsa Frank, chalémie, bombarde, bassanello, basson ténor,
flûte à bec basset
Jérémie Papasergio, basson basse, flûte à bec
basset
Pascale Boquet, théorbe
Jean-Paul Boury, cornet à bouquin et cornet muet, flûte à
bec contrebasse, flûte à bec basse
William Dongois, cornet à bouquin et cornet muet
Franck Poitrineau, sacqueboute
Yuka Saito, basse de viole renaissance
Françoise Enock, basse de viole renaissance
Sylvia Abramowicz, viole ténor renaissance
Dominique Ferran, orgue positif
Bruno Caillat, percussions
Direction : Denis RAISIN-DADRE
Astrée Naïve
E 8808 [62.40]
Crotchet
AmazonUK
AmazonUS
It had required quite an effort to decipher even brief particulars from the
tiny white-on-yellow print of the visually attractive but trendy &
user-unfriendly packaging. The booklet is stuck into the case, which I find
a nuisance, and a lot of its text is devoted to Royal marriage ceremonies
in Florence & Lyon c.1600, which is how so many early music CDs are now
marketed. I am grateful to Doulce Mémoire for supplying (after
I had written this review) the track listing, which I had been unable to
locate on the (interesting & colouful, definitely not naive) Astrée
website; those can often be found by searching the Web if necessary.
It is an exceptionally attractive and well-conceived release, so the effort
on both sides was worthwhile.
To get to the music, the first tracks are secular & by mainly obscure
composers like Rapin & Bernardi, with a substantial 13 mins
Epithalame by Claude Lejeune for two choirs. There are Pavanes
and Sinfonias and celebratory vocal items. It is all refreshingly
cheerful music, such as might have been given in the Cathedral before the
marriage ceremony itself. The rest is devoted to a Mass for Double Choir
by Marco da Gagliano (1582-1643) with interposed movements by Guami &
Bati, whom I did not know either. To finish, another Sinfonia and an 8 mins
Te Deum by Lejeune.
The French music demands special attention to its rhythms, and this is explained
in fullest detail. For the Italian music, there is emphasis on instrumental
sumptuousness, including the rare bassanello, with cornett, viols,
sackbut & recorders. The Mass has double instrumental choirs to produce
its richness, and the recording (location, I have failed to discover) does
it all full justice. Despite my minor quibbles, this is an admirable, scholarly
production, with full details of participants and all their intruments, going
into such matters as for which words r's should be rolled once, twice or
thrice! Full texts and translations.
It's a great CD, really!
Peter Grahame Woolf