Nicolas Gombert 
                  is one of those names which is probably familiar to singers 
                  and church-goers thanks to the popularity of one or two of his 
                  motets. In fact he wrote a considerable number of these. Some 
                  180 have been attributed to him but the figure is probably closer 
                  to 130 once duplicates with different texts have been removed. 
                  These outnumber his mass settings by a ratio of 10:1. Similar 
                  figures apply to the output of his contemporaries Clemens non 
                  Papa and Adrian Willaert.
                
This new disc, from 
                  the Brabant Ensemble presents an attractive programme of eleven 
                  motets. This is a rich harvest; many of pieces here are around 
                  7 minutes or so in length and some more so.
                
Many of Gombert’s 
                  motets are penitential and commentators have found it tempting 
                  to link this to the best known episode in Gombert’s life. This 
                  is his dismissal from Imperial Service and exile to the high 
                  seas for the violation of a boy in the Imperial service. The 
                  presumption is that it was a choir-boy but this is not actually 
                  recorded. He is supposed to have been accepted back into Imperial 
                  service thanks to his writing of a sequence of eight Magnificats, 
                  though it is unclear how he managed to do this whilst chained 
                  in a galley!
                
His first book of 
                  four-part motets, published in Venice in 1539, seems to have 
                  taken the form of an extended penance for his crime. Not only 
                  are many of the motets on a penitential or sorrowful form but 
                  many refer to deliverance from watery punishment.
                
Gombert can often 
                  be seen simply as a link between the low and high Renaissance, 
                  between the music of Josquin and Palestrina. But on the basis 
                  of this disc it is much more, with a vigour and richness all 
                  its own. Contemporaries suggested that Gombert had studied with 
                  Josquin, though we have no evidence for this. Gombert’s music 
                  was consistently polyphonic in style and eschewed the more modern 
                  styles of his Italian brethren.
                
Gombert and his 
                  contemporaries have all been rather ignored until recently, 
                  so it is difficult to tell whether Gombert’s own particular 
                  reputation has suffered because of his conviction.
                
Jeremy Summerly 
                  and the Oxford Camerata have already issued a fine disc of his 
                  music on Naxos. Now we have this new one from Stephen Rice and 
                  the Brabant Ensemble.
                
The music on this 
                  disc is all richly textured smooth polyphony. The long-breathed 
                  motets are superbly architectured and bring to mind the long, 
                  richly complex liturgies of the Imperial Chapel. The opening 
                  motet, Tribulatio et angustia is very much typical of 
                  the style of motet on the disc and the Brabant Ensemble’s approach 
                  to performance.
                
Most of the motets 
                  are written for a five-part ensemble, SAATB, the two alto parts 
                  contributing to the wonderful textural richness. Virgo sancta 
                  Katherina, is the exception, being a beautifully canonic 
                  piece set for SSSA and hypnotically sung by the ensemble.
                
The recorded sequence 
                  includes one secular piece, a setting of a neo-Latin poem by 
                  Johannes Secundus (Jan Everaerts), on convalescing from an illness. 
                  The piece takes a more fluid attitude to the text than the motets 
                  and is closer to Gombert’s French chansons.
                
The Brabant Ensemble 
                  is a group of some fourteen voices; their singing is smooth 
                  with a good line, giving a nice even feel to the polyphony. 
                  They sound as if they have been singing this music for ever, 
                  which is always essential in this repertoire.
                
The sound is very 
                  much soprano-led, though this may be a result of the acoustic 
                  which is vibrant and lively. But the recording does justice 
                  to the singers and allows us to hear a remarkable amount of 
                  detail.
                
Rice and the Brabant 
                  display fine musicianship and commendable curiosity in their 
                  investigation of the motets by this underrated composer. Judging 
                  by the length of the motets, they are unlikely to find a regular 
                  place in the modern liturgy, but in these performances they 
                  make ideal listening. 
                
Robert Hugill