Although John Taverner stands as one 
                of England’s 
                greatest musical minds, there is very 
                little known about his life. It is known 
                that he grew up in Lincolnshire, 
                and that he very likely worked in London. He was the first choirmaster of Cardinal College, 
                Oxford, and, after 
                his patron Cardinal Wolsey’s fall from 
                the grace of Henry VIII in 1530, settled 
                in Boston (England, not Massachusetts) 
                where he lived until his death. 
                  His 
                    Western Wind Mass is one of three extant settings using this 
                    somewhat bawdy secular tune as its cantus firmus. The others 
                    are by John Sheppard and Christopher Tye. The Taverner mass 
                    contains the tune some thirty-six times. The result is an 
                    amazing example of early renaissance polyphony, a work of 
                    transparent and radiant beauty. 
                  Ars 
                    Nova Copenhagen under Paul Hillier’s able baton presents a 
                    disc of nearly flawless singing. It is quite easy to lapse 
                    into the mode of “mono-pretty” when presenting this music. 
                    That is, the tendency to sing with an incessantly mellifluous 
                    tone, perfect in rhythm and intonation but utterly lacking 
                    in interest. It is a flaw that appears regularly in discs 
                    by the Tallis Scholars. The saints be praised, Mr. Hillier 
                    never allows this to happen, and we have a performance that 
                    is every bit as emotionally engaging as it is ethereally beautiful. 
                    
                  The 
                    choir from Copenhagen, from the looks of their photograph 
                    is made up of relatively young singers, and the agility and 
                    purity of their singing belies this. Yet, it has been some 
                    time indeed since I have heard a choir sing with such intellectual 
                    and musical maturity as this one. Would God the Americans 
                    could have the kind of vocal tradition (and popular support 
                    thereof) that is found in blessed Scandinavia. 
                  Hillier 
                    has chosen to present the mass as it might have appeared in 
                    an actual liturgy, with motets from Taverner’s contemporaries 
                    interspersed between the movements. This makes for a nice 
                    flow to the mass setting, never intended to be performed without 
                    pause for the appropriate liturgical actions. 
                  To 
                    sum it up, this is flawless singing from every point of view. 
                    There is a second disc of Taverner’s music available from 
                    the same forces, and if this one is any indication, a purchase 
                    of both is a must. 
                  Kevin 
                    Sutton
                  
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