This
                        disc from the Tallis Scholars is promised as the first
                        in a new series of Josquin masses. Here Peter Phillips
                        and his group present two Josquin masses which would
                        seem to come from opposite ends of Josquin’s career.
                        Both masses are entirely based on canons. 
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    Missa
                            Ad Fugam is
                            an early work. In it the canon is always between
                            the top part and the third part down, and always
                            a fifth apart. All five movements start with the
                            same material, so all start with the same canonic
                            opening. Josquin’s writing is easy to follow and
                            transparent, with the non-canonic lines - the second
                            and fourth parts - often hardly joining in at all.
                            Dating of the mass owes something to stylistic concerns
                            as the canonic writing is far stiffer than would
                            have happened in Josquin’s later examples. But there
                            also exists an original source in the library of
                            Jena University in which someone, possibly Josquin,
                            has re-worked the canon in the 
Sanctus and Agnus.
                            These changes owe rather more to Josquin’s later
                            style, the revisions providing tauter thinking which
                            contrasts with the long lines of the original. On
                            this disc, the Tallis Scholars rather usefully record
                            both the original and the revisions, which allows
                            us a rare glimpse into a composer’s revisions from
                            the medieval period.
                                         
                    
                    By
                        contrast the 
Missa Sine Nomine is
                        a prime example of Josquin’s later mature style. The
                        work comes just before his last mass setting, the 
Missa
                        Pange lingua. In his article in the CD booklet Peter
                        Phillips suggests that this may have been written by
                        Josquin as a deliberate foil to the earlier mass, to
                        show what he was now capable of. If, as is presumed,
                        Josquin studied with Ockeghem then the quote from Ockeghem’s 
Nymphes
                        des bois in the Credo (at the words 
et incarnatus
                        est) may be Josquin’s tribute to his late master’s
                        famed dexterity with the canonic form.
                                         
                    
                        
Missa
                          Sine Nomine is a far denser,
                          less transparent work than its predecessor. The canons
                          are distributed all over the score, rather than being
                          confined to particular voices, and Josquin makes things
                          more complex by introducing canonic imitation as well
                          as pure canon. Of course none of this really matters;
                          the mass can be listened to without any knowledge of
                          its construction. That is part of Josquin’s genius
                          and probably his way of showing off; to construct something
                          so fine and so complex and to disguise the construction
                          mechanism so perfectly.
                                         
                    
                    The
                        Tallis Scholars recorded both works with choirs of eight
                        singers, two per part. No recording date is provided,
                        but given that both Philip Cave and James Gilchrist are
                        included in the line-up points to a recording date rather
                        earlier than 2008, the year of publication.
                                         
                    
                    The
                        masses are performed in the Tallis Scholars familiar
                        and inimitable style. Lines are beautifully shaped and
                        delineated, the interplay between the different voices
                        is shaded perfectly and the polyphony is beautifully
                        transparent and easy to follow. The performance is well
                        modulated; vibrato is sparing which means that each line
                        has strength and integrity. A detractor could describe
                        these performances as coolly English, verging on icy
                        perfection. To which you might reply that all the passion
                        is in the nuances and phrasing. 
                                         
                    
                    I
                        could imagine these masses sung by one of the more recent
                        choral groups, performed intensely and vibrantly with,
                        perhaps, one to a part. That would be an entirely different
                        performance and just as valid. After all we know little
                        of the performance practices of the choirs for which
                        Josquin wrote these pieces. 
                                         
                    
                    Admirers
                        of the Tallis Scholars will definitely want these discs.
                        Admirers of Josquin masses can buy them in the secure
                        knowledge that they will be getting near perfection of
                        execution.
                    
                        
 
                    
                        Robert Hugill
                        
                        see also review by Brian Wilson