Josquin des PRÉS (c. 1440-1521)
          Plainchant – Gaudeamus omnes [1:13]
          Missa Gaudeamus [35:57]
          Missa L’ami Baudichon [29:37]
          The Tallis Scholars/Peter Phillips
          rec. the Chapel of Merton College, Oxford
          Latin texts and English, French & German translations included
          GIMELL CDGIM050 [66:48]
          It’s two years since the last instalment in the projected complete 
          set of Josquin Masses from Peter Phillips and The Tallis Scholars (review). 
          This latest release is the seventh in the series and I understand there 
          will be two more before the mission is accomplished.
          
          These two Mass settings are very different from each other. Peter Phillips 
          tells us in his notes that Missa Gaudeamus was probably 
          written right in the middle of Josquin’s Mass-writing career; 
          it is thought to be the ninth of his eighteen settings. It was written 
          for the Feast of All Saints and it’s based on a plainchant melody, 
          which we hear in full, sung by three tenors, before the Mass itself 
          is performed. In the main, Josquin only uses the first six notes of 
          the chant for his structural framework. By contrast, Missa L’ami 
          Baudichon is based on a three-note figure from a decidedly risqué 
          French chanson. This Mass was probably composed around 1475.
          
          The four-voice Missa Gaudeamus, says Phillips, “represents 
          Renaissance artistry at its most intense”. The Kyrie is fairly 
          concise in terms of the amount of time needed to sing it – just 
          under three minutes here – but it seems to pack in quite a lot 
          in terms of musical invention. In the Gloria, Peter Philips draws attention 
          to the inventiveness with which Josquin deploys his six-note motif – 
          apparently, at one point the tenors sing it for 45 continuous bars – 
          but even if, like me, you can’t always pick up this technical 
          accomplishment in what you hear, it’s impossible not to be impressed 
          by the aural web of amazingly intricate polyphony. The music of the 
          ‘Qui tollis’ section is very poised at first but gradually 
          grows in intensity and the brief ‘Cum Sancto Spiritu’ bursts 
          with positive energy. In the Credo my ear was caught in particular by 
          the ‘Et incarnatus’ section with its wonderful long lines 
          in every vocal part. When ‘Et Resurrexit’ is reached the 
          members of The Tallis Scholars invest the music with a palpable sense 
          of jubilation and that’s even more marked at ‘Qui ex Patre 
          Filioque procedit’. The closing moments of the Creed are exultant; 
          here, Josquin’s music is fast-moving and the singers make it truly 
          exciting.
          
          Later on in the work, the two ‘Hosanna’ sections are exuberant 
          and vital; the second of these provides a super contrast, coming as 
          it does after the solemn music of the Benedictus. In this passage of 
          music the vocal parts seem almost to fall over each other, so teeming 
          are the textures. The three-fold Agnus Dei consists of a first ‘Agnus’ 
          sung by the consort. The second is a lovely and extended canon for the 
          two sopranos, superbly sung here. The third ‘Agnus’ is the 
          longest and the most intricate - Peter Phillips outlines Josquin’s 
          dazzling compositional virtuosity in his notes. His expert singers bring 
          Josquin’s music to life: despite the technical accomplishment 
          that lies behind it there’s absolutely nothing dry or remotely 
          academic about the music when it’s delivered like this.
          
          
          Peter Phillips believes that the name Baudichon was probably given as 
          a nickname for a ‘lusty and swaggering youth’. As I said 
          earlier, Missa L’ami Baudichon takes as its inspiration 
          a rather bawdy chanson, albeit only three notes are used. Phillips 
          says that the Mass “represents Renaissance artistry at its most 
          skittish”. Certainly, the Kyrie, though beautifully conceived, 
          doesn’t seem to be the earnest plea for mercy that the words indicate. 
          In the Gloria, the textures seem to me to be simpler than in the other 
          Mass. The concluding section, beginning at ‘Qui sedes ad dexteram 
          Patris’ displays youthful exuberance; you can sense Josquin flexing 
          his compositional muscles. Such exuberance is also evident at the start 
          of the Credo; this is fervent music, performed here with terrific spirit. 
          Peter Phillips rightly draws our attention to the ‘Et resurrexit’ 
          section. He tells us that this lasts for 157 bars and it seems to me 
          to constitute a veritable stream of virtuosic music. The performance 
          has great dynamism and Josquin’s music is fast-paced and genuinely 
          exciting. If anyone thinks that Renaissance polyphony is dull then surely 
          this track on the CD would change their mind. After the frenetic activity 
          at the end of the Credo the ordered lines of the Sanctus provide a welcome 
          contrast. The short ‘Hosanna’ sections impress through the 
          majestic nature of the music, albeit in a compressed form. I sat back 
          and simply enjoyed listening to this cheerful setting of the Mass.
          
          As ever, The Tallis Scholars sing all the music on this disc flawlessly. 
          However, what we hear is far from calculated “mere” perfection. 
          The singers, responding to Peter Phillips’ direction, bring these 
          Masses vividly to life. The ensemble has been recorded expertly by engineer 
          Philip Hobbs. He’s long experienced in recording The Tallis Scholars 
          in the acoustic of Merton College Chapel and it shows. The acoustic 
          is ideally suited to music and performances such as these and the singers 
          have been recorded with great clarity and just the right mount of ambience. 
          As usual, the release is comprehensively documented.
          
          This is another memorable issue in The Tallis Scholars’ Josquin 
          series.
          
          John 
          Quinn
          
          The Tallis Scholars Josquin Mass series on MusicWeb International
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