This recording is scheduled for release on CD in May 2012 but 
                  is available in advance for download from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  in mp3 and lossless sound; my review is based on the latter. 
                  The CD can be pre-ordered.
                   
                  We now have three excellent performances of Tye’s masterpiece, 
                  the Euge bone Mass – with a possible fourth if the 
                  ASV recording of three of his Masses were ever to be reissued: 
                  it’s currently not available but some ASV recordings are gradually 
                  trickling back into the catalogue. Two rival recordings come 
                  at budget price:
                   
                  Christopher TYE
                  Kyrie ‘Orbis factor’ [3:39]
                  Missa Euge bone [26:16]
                  Quæsumus omnipotens Deus [6:55]
                  Miserere mei, Deus [9:16]
                  Omnes gentes, plaudite manibus [4:14]
                  Peccavimus cum patribus nostris [13:40]
                  The Choir of Winchester Cathedral/David Hill – rec. March 1990. 
                  DDD
                  Booklet with texts and translations included
                  HYPERION HELIOS CDH55079 [64:49] – from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  (on CD, mp3 and lossless downloads.)
                  Review
                   
                  Christopher TYE
                  Omnes gentes, plaudite manibus [5:22]
                  Kyrie [4:41]
                  Missa Euge bone [25:36]
                  William MUNDY (c.1529-c.1591) Magnificat 
                  [9:58]
                  Christopher TYE Peccavimus cum patribus nostris 
                  [12:47]
                  Oxford Camerata/Jeremy Summerly – rec. 1993. DDD.
                  Booklet with texts and translations included
                  NAXOS 8.550937 [58:23] – on CD, download from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                   
                  I can fully endorse Gary Higginson’s high opinion of the Winchester 
                  version ‘This is a fine disc, the music is attractive and the 
                  polyphony never too impenetrable or over long. The singing is 
                  first class… Anyone who likes English polyphony should get this 
                  CD which is most attractively priced.’ (See review 
                  for details.) The Naxos recording has been a valued part of 
                  my CD collection since it was released almost twenty years ago
                  
                  It would seem, with two such strong rivals for half the price, 
                  that the new Hyperion needs to be especially good to justify 
                  itself.
                   
                  I think that there is enough that is distinctive to recommend 
                  it: the inclusion of Tye’s other masterpiece, the Western 
                  Wynde Mass - though I must point out the availability of 
                  this work on an inexpensive Gimell set listed below; the interspersing 
                  of the Latin and English works and, not least, the generous 
                  playing time. In many ways it’s the inclusion of the English 
                  settings that is most instructive, since there is so little 
                  difference in style between the two, partly because Tye’s Latin 
                  settings are less florid, less elaborate than those of his contemporaries.
                   
                  In comparison Tallis’s English settings sound a pale imitation 
                  of their Latin counterparts; it was not until Byrd’s Great Service, 
                  Second Service and English anthems that Tye’s talent in both 
                  languages was rivalled and exceeded. I’m not sure that Tye’s 
                  setting of the Easter anthem Christ rising from the dead, 
                  which here receives a powerful performance, doesn’t match Byrd’s 
                  English setting of the same text of which you’ll find several 
                  versions on YouTube. They are not really comparable, since the 
                  Byrd 6-part setting with viol accompaniment is more domestic 
                  in tone – there’s a good recording of this and other music, 
                  vocal and instrumental, by Byrd performed by Red Byrd and the 
                  Rose Consort on Naxos 8.550604.
                   
                  The English setting of Nunc Dimittis is odd in that 
                  the text doesn’t correspond to that in any version of the Book 
                  of Common Prayer. It predates even the first Book of 1549 and 
                  shows the composer’s way with English texts at an early date. 
                  The simplicity of the setting and the sympathetic performance 
                  which it receives means that it rounds off the programme quietly 
                  and very effectively.
                   
                  The Euge bone Mass fits the reformers’ desire for one 
                  note per syllable so well – a rule also formulated by the Roman 
                  Catholic Council of Trent – that it’s impossible to say when 
                  it was composed: in the latter part of the reign of Henry VIII 
                  or in that of Edward VI, Mary or Elizabeth. The Naxos notes 
                  suggest that of the young reformer King Edward, whose tutor 
                  was Tye’s younger contemporary Mundy, for the Mass and the associated 
                  quæsumus omnipotens Deus – yet the Naxos recording 
                  is the only one of the three not to include that work for comparison.
                   
                  Like many Tudor settings, Tye’s Euge bone Mass comes 
                  without Kyries, perhaps in this case because these 
                  had been replaced in the Book of Common Prayer by the Ten Commandments. 
                  It was usually assumed that these would be chanted, though, 
                  paradoxically, Taverner composed a separate polyphonic setting 
                  of them, not attached to any complete Mass, the Kyrie Leroy. 
                  (Find it sung by The Tallis Scholars with Taverner’s Missa 
                  Gloria tibi Trinitas, etc., on Gimell CDGIM004 
                  – or stream from Naxos Music Library). One reason for 
                  this common omission may have been the late medieval tendency 
                  to introduce ‘farced’ tests, often very elaborate, into the 
                  simple nine-fold Kyrie eleison-Christe eleison. Several 
                  of these are included in the Sarum Missal.
                   
                  O’Donnell simply performs what Tye sets as part of the Euge 
                  bone Mass but Summerly includes a separate setting of the 
                  Kyrie and Hill begins with a setting of one of those 
                  farced setting, Kyrie orbis factor. In this respect, 
                  the new recording is less instructive than the two older ones.
                   
                  That Euge bone comes in tandem with the Western 
                  Wynde Mass on the new Hyperion, however, swings the balance 
                  in the other direction. The performance rivals that on Gimell; 
                  in a sense they are not in competition because, as you would 
                  expect, a cathedral performance with boys’ voices on the top 
                  line is different from that of a small professional group. With 
                  Tye’s reformist tendencies, too, it’s appropriate that Hyperion 
                  have recorded the music at Westminster Abbey rather than the 
                  Cathedral. As you might have expected, James O’Donnell takes 
                  the music at a faster pace than Peter Phillips with the Tallis 
                  Scholars but you would never notice the difference unless you 
                  played them serially, a silly game which reviewers have to play. 
                  Even then I certainly couldn’t say that one was unduly fast 
                  or the other unduly slow.
                   
                  That Gimell recording of the Western Wynde Mass which I’ve mentioned 
                  is on The Tallis Scholars sing Tudor Music (I), Gimell 
                  CDGIM209, 2CDs for 1 – see my review 
                  for details. Like the two budget-price recordings of the Euge 
                  bone Mass it sets a very high standard against which the 
                  new recording has to compete and it comes in the company of 
                  equally splendid recordings of the music of Tye’s contemporaries. 
                  In fact, it’s so good that you’ll probably want to purchase 
                  the companion 2-CD set of the music of later Tudor composers 
                  too (CDGIM210, reviewed 
                  jointly with Volume 1).
                   
                  If it’s the two Tye Masses together and in the company of his 
                  little-performed English-texted music that you want, however, 
                  the new Hyperion recording is unrivalled. If you prefer boys’ 
                  voices, that’s an added advantage. With very good recording 
                  in an ideal acoustic and notes of the usual high Hyperion quality, 
                  you won’t be disappointed. Even the cover merits special mention 
                  – Christ holding the world in His hand, as in the vision of 
                  Julian of Norwich, from the Westminster Retable.
                   
                  Brian Wilson