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Lassus - Lamentationes Jeremiæ Prophetæ
Collegium Regale
directed: Stephen Cleobury
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"It is traditional to perform the Lamentations of Jeremiah the
Prophet during Holy Week. Here, Collegium Regale, or King's College
Cambridge minus the trebles, sings the version by Roland de Lassus
in exquisitely indulgent slow moving five-part counterpoint, milking
delicious penitence from every line. No sinner could ignore the
culminating solemn call to repent : "Jerusalem convertere ad
Dominum." It is incredible to think that these mature vocalists
are mere students who must be recycled every three years. The
mystery of the choir achieves its gorgeous blend with such
transitory, albeit overlapping, personnel"
*****
The Times
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“Collegium Regale's meticulously disciplined singing ensures
that these subtleties make their fullest impact”
Daily Telegraph
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"the Introit is given a quietly magical ending and, in the verse of the Gradual
('Virga tua'), we are treated to a sparkling display of virtuosic but balanced
singing"
BBC Music Magazine
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“their luxuriant blend of voices is lavished on two
large-scale works by Lassus, enveloping the listener in an indulgent
cocoon of sound”
The Sunday Times |
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"these performances are impeccable, the timbre of the voices
and the sheer depth of the sound perfectly complimenting the
mournful nature of Lassus's Lamentations"
International Record Review |
Daily Telegraph
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| |
|
"the Introit is given a quietly magical ending and, in the verse of the Gradual
('Virga tua'), we are treated to a sparkling display of virtuosic but balanced
singing"
BBC Music Magazine
|
| |
|
|
“their luxuriant blend of voices is lavished on two
large-scale works by Lassus, enveloping the listener in an indulgent
cocoon of sound”
The Sunday Times |
|
|
|
|
"these performances are impeccable, the timbre of the voices
and the sheer depth of the sound perfectly complimenting the
mournful nature of Lassus's Lamentations"
International Record Review |
[FrontPage Include Component]
The Daily Telegraph, 15th April 2006
It is a particular pleasure - and one that is a great deal rarer than
it ought to be - to listen to a recording of Renaissance vocal music where
the words are so clearly enunciated that there is never the slightest
doubt as to what is being sung at any given moment. The pleasure is all
the greater when, as with Lassus's setting of the Lamentations for Maundy
Thursday, the composer is responding to a highly emotive text with
word-painting of the greatest subtlety, where much of the expressive
effect depends on the precise placing of a pianissimo that dwindles to
nothing, or a sudden violently agitated climax.
Collegium Regale's meticulously disciplined singing ensures that these
subtleties make their fullest impact in a performance that reflects this
deceptively simple music's fluctuating emotions, from the sense of
emptiness and horror at the contemplation of the desolate city to brief
moments of irrepressible anger. Their dark, rich sound enables the group
to bring a similar intensity to Lassus's last work, the motet Vide homo,
which overflows with anguish.
Elizabeth Roche
BBC Music Magazine, June 2006
Performance ***
Sound
****
Most of these works date from the 1580s. They were written when Lassus
was at the court in Munich and are magnificnet, mature masterpieces. The
Lamentations are his set for five voices, but we only get the Maundy
Thursday group here, not the complete run through to Holy Saturday. Also
the four-voiced Requiem Mass is on a smaller scale than is other settings,
but no less profound for that. The two motets 'In monte Olivete' and 'Vide
homo' are a great bonus, and were widely admired in the 16th century (and
later).
The Collegium Regale is a choir of 14 male singers from King's College
Cambridge. In the Lamentations Stephen Cleobury forces an almost
organ-like effect from them - a strong, relentlessly sustained sound, with
plenty of swell but not much inflection and not much real sense of
lamentation. The Requiem Mass is altogether different. There is still the
full sound at climaxes (in the Sanctus, for example), but the Introit is
given a quietly magical ending and, in the verse of the Gradual ('Virga
tua'), we are treated to a sparkling display of virtuosic but balanced
singing. The recording ends with 'Vide homo', a work Lassus composed just
three weeks before his death; its reflective tones finally manage to evoke
some inward quality from the choir. Having said all that, there are very
few recordings of these pieces, and so we must be grateful for these
clear, musical performances sustained by some rock solid singing.
Anthony Pryer
The Sunday Times, 14th May 2006 ***
Collegium Regale is, simply, the Choir of King's College, Cambridge,
minus the boys. Here, under Cleobury's direction, their luxuriant blend of
voices is lavished on two large-scale works by Lassus, enveloping the
listener in an indulgent cocoon of sound (and who cares if it is authentic
or not?).
The five-part Lamentations of Jeremiah for Maundy Thursday (1585)
preceeds with dignified restraint. The Requiem, notable for its succinct,
clean outlines and compositional freedom, is given a properly sober,
intimate reading, though perhaps it is too closely miked. Two great
motets, the six-voice In monte Oliveti and the moving, seven-voice Vide
homo, and the plainsong tract Absolve Domine complete an alluring disc.
Stephen Pettitt
The Times, 8 - 14th April 2006 *****
It is traditional to perform the Lamentations of Jeremiah
the Prophet during Holy Week. Here, Collegium Regale, or King's College
Cambridge minus the trebles, sings the version by Roland de Lassus in
exquisitely indulgent slow moving five-part counterpoint, milking
delicious penitence from every line. No sinner could ignore the
culminating solemn call to repent : "Jerusalem convertere ad Dominum."
It is incredible to think that these mature vocalists are mere students
who must be recycled every three years. The mystery of the choir achieves
its gorgeous blend with such transitory, albeit overlapping, personnel.
Rick Jones
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Lamentationes Jeremiæ Prophetæ (5vv, 1585) - Primi Diei
(Thursday in Holy Week)
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| 1 |
Lamentatio Prima |
[8.37] |
| 2 |
Lamentatio Secunda |
[8.37] |
| 3 |
Lamentatio Tertia |
[8.52] |
| 4 |
Motet: In monte Oliveti (6vv, 1568) |
[4.10] |
| 5 |
Tract: Absolve, Domine (Mode VIII) |
[3.00] |
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Requiem - Missa pro defunctis (4vv, 1578) |
| 6 |
Introitus: Requiem æternam |
[6.29] |
| 7 |
Kyrie eleison |
[3.35] |
| 8 |
Graduale: Si ambulem |
[5.30] |
| 9 |
Offertorium: Domine Jesu Christe |
[6.20] |
| 10 |
Sanctus |
[4.40] |
| 11 |
Agnus Dei |
[3.19] |
| 12 |
Communio: Lux æterna |
[3.34] |
| 13 |
Motet: Vide homo (7vv, 1594) |
[3.21] |
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Total running time: |
[70.06] |
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