This 2 CD set re-cycles five striking masses by five
                  very different Flemish composers. The time-span covers a century
                  from 1475
                  
                  (for Ockeghem’s Missa Au travail suis) to 1575
                   (for Lassus’ Missa Osculetur me). As those one
                    hundred eyars unfolded so the sense of what a mass was developed
                   
                  also. In the first of these Ockeghem uses just four voices
                   and  is not far from Josquin for whom the four-voiced mass
                   was perfect 
                  chamber music. The next in line, Isaac, uses six voices, then
                    Brumel an amazing twelve, de Rore deploys seven voices and
                   finally 
                  Lassus contributes a double choir mass (two choirs each of
                   eight  voices) used in the late renaissance poly-choral manner. 
                  
                  The recordings here were made over an eight year period, all 
                  at the Church of St. Peter and St. Paul, Salle, so that there 
                  is a consistency of sound quality. All have been issued before 
                  in single composer discs. I am not sure whether it is helpful 
                  to lump all five together under the Flemish category as the 
                  composers’ backgrounds are so different. But it does provide 
                  a nice excuse to assemble some lovely recordings of delicious 
                  music. That said, the composers are all linked by a commonality 
                  of technique, even if the results differ remarkably. All are 
                  based on pre-existing material with much contrapuntal ingenuity 
                  creating a melodic mosaic. 
                  
                  The casts for these recordings are in effect a roll-call of 
                  fine and distinguished singers. They include Tessa Bonner, Charles 
                  Daniels, Sally Dunkley, Robert Harre-Jones, Mark Padmore, Deborah 
                  Roberts and Ashley Stafford. I must confess that, in the past, 
                  I have found the Tallis Scholars’ approach to music of 
                  this period to be rather too smooth and over modulated. I have 
                  usually preferred a more muscular approach. I seem to have mellowed, 
                  as I found the Tallis Scholars’ style entirely apposite 
                  to the music. 
                  
                  Ockeghem’s Missa Au travail suis is based on a 
                  secular tune, either a chanson by Ockeghem himself or another 
                  unknown composer. Ockeghem only quotes the tenor part from the 
                  chanson. Ockeghem keeps his four voices to within quite a narrow 
                  compass so that the result is a Mass full of low, dark textures. 
                  The Tallis Scholars give it a rather lovely chocolaty texture. 
                  They also relish the moments when Ockeghem thins things out, 
                  leaving just a pair of voices. 
                  
                  By contrast, Isaac’s Missa De Apostolis displays 
                  rich textures and soaring lines. It unfolds in a leisurely fashion; 
                  Isaac misses out the Credo, whereas Ockeghem includes it. Isaac 
                  still manages to make his mass last eight minutes longer than 
                  Ockeghem’s example. Isaac sets the text alternim, 
                  alternating plainchant with polyphony. The contrast helps to 
                  emphasise the richness of the six-part writing. It is based 
                  on plainchant for the Feast of the Apostles and was presumably 
                  written for the court in Vienna where Isaac was employed; in 
                  Vienna it was customary not to include the Credo as part of 
                  the Ordinary. 
                  
                  Cipriano de Rore’s Missa Praeter rerum seriem seems 
                  to date from the period 1547/48 when de Rore was employed by 
                  Duke Ercole II d’Este of Ferrara. De Rore was an older 
                  contemporary of Lassus and wrote the mass just ten or twenty 
                  years before Lassus’s Missa Osculetur me. Despite 
                  this, de Rore’s writing is firmly in the Flemish school 
                  - worlds away from Venetian polychoral writing. It is based 
                  on a Josquin motet; de Rore also repeatedly uses the song’s 
                  alto part as a cantus firmus, setting as the text 
                  Duke Ercole’s name. The textures are rich and dark, enlivened 
                  by some nice cross rhythms. 
                  
                  Brumel’s astonishing Missa Et ecce terrae motus dates 
                  from before 1520, when no-one had written a 12 part mass. He 
                  became deservedly famous for this piece in the 16th 
                  century. The manuscript source for the mass was copied for a 
                  1570s performance at the Bavarian Court in which Lassus sang 
                  Tenor 2 and the top three parts were taken by boys. Parts of 
                  the Agnus Dei have rotted away so that any completion must be 
                  conjectural. The part allocation is remarkable. Technically 
                  there are three soprano parts, three alto parts, three tenor 
                  parts and three bass parts. Only one alto part is really an 
                  alto part. Brumel uses the other two altos and the three tenors 
                  to cover the same tessitura, writing far-reaching parts so that 
                  alto 2 has a range of over two octaves. 
                  
                  In the twelve voiced parts, Brumel runs a series of canonic 
                  textures over an unhurried cantus firmus - based on the 
                  Easter antiphon Et Ecce terrae motus. The result is harmonically 
                  slow-moving and almost unadventurous, but in terms of texture 
                  and use of canonic motifs it is dazzling - think Josquin arranged 
                  by John Adams perhaps. This performance from the Tallis Scholars 
                  manages to bring admirable clarity to the textures, when it 
                  could easily be a muddy mess. Generally the cantus firmus 
                  lines are set nicely, being highlighted against the faster-moving 
                  canonic textures. That said, occasionally an individual voice 
                  gets a little too much prominence. 
                  
                  As ever Peter Phillips directs these performances with clarity, 
                  precision and a feel for a nicely modulated line. A great deal 
                  of scholarship has gone into producing the music on the disc, 
                  but when you listen you forget scholarship and simply lie back 
                  and enjoy some fabulous music, beautifully and intelligently 
                  sung.
                Robert Hugill