Josquin des Prez: Motets for the Blessed Virgin Cappella Nova & Richard Taruskin

Album info

Album-Release:
2022

HRA-Release:
02.12.2022

Label: Musical Heritage Society

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Choral

Artist: Cappella Nova & Richard Taruskin

Composer: Josquin des Prez (1455-1521)

Album including Album cover

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  • Josquin des Prez (1455 - 1521): Ave Maria:
  • 1 Prez: Ave Maria 04:42
  • Vultum tuum deprecabuntur:
  • 2 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Prima Pars - Vultum tuum deprecabuntur 01:45
  • 3 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Secunda Pars - Sancta Dei genitrix 01:21
  • 4 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Tertia Pars - Intemerata Virgo 02:23
  • 5 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Quarta Pars - O Maria 01:57
  • 6 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Quinta Pars - Mente tota 02:25
  • 7 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Sexta Pars - Ora pro nobis 02:32
  • 8 Prez: Vultum tuum deprecabuntur: Septima Et Ultima Pars - Christe, Fili Dei 02:59
  • Ave, nobilissima creatura:
  • 9 Prez: Ave, nobilissima creatura 07:52
  • Pater Noster/Ave Maria:
  • 10 Prez: Pater Noster/Ave Maria 07:13
  • Salve Regina:
  • 11 Prez: Salve Regina 02:31
  • Benedicta es, coelorum Regina:
  • 12 Prez: Benedicta es, coelorum Regina 05:08
  • Ludwig Senfl (1490 - 1543): Ave Maria (Senfl):
  • 13 Senfl: Ave Maria (Senfl) 13:16
  • Total Runtime 56:04

Info for Josquin des Prez: Motets for the Blessed Virgin



For the last eight years, Cappella Nova has been singing liturgical music of the Renaissance and the late Middle Ages for New York audiences. Sunday evening at St. Joseph's church in Greenwich Village the 19-member group and its director, Richard Taruskin, gave their last concert for a while. Cappella Nova is taking a year off and is scheduled to reassemble in the fall of 1984.

They will be missed. New York, for all its variegated musical resources, has few vocal ensembles of true excellence. Cappella Nova, in terms of tone, technique, sophistication and seriousness of purpose, has stood consistently above its colleagues, and Sunday's concert, which centered on Flemish music of the early 16th century, reminded us how satisfying Mr. Taruskin and his singers can be.

The concert was titled ''A Flemish Tribute to the Virgin Mary,'' and there was music by Josquin des Prez, Pierre de la Rue, Henricus Isaac, Loyset Compere, and most especially, Jacob Obrecht. The evening centered on Obrecht's ''Miss Salve Diva Parens,'' a work of great beauty and arresting originality. Its music plays with architectural proportions as a mathematician plays with numbers, but one never feels burdened by detail. The Kyrie is full of sinuous rhythmic life and wonderful modulations. The Agnus Dei is blessed with gracefully skipping sequential patterns. And there is one startling harmonic change in the Sanctus that cuts across five centuries of harmonic development in its immediacy.

St. Joseph's church opens onto the hyperactivity of the lower Avenue of the Americas, and grating street noise and sirens intermittently intruded on Cappella Nova's beautiful singing. These outside sounds were in one sense disruptive, but in another, they seemed to frame and heighten the serenity and peace of the great music within.

Cappella Nova
Richard Taruskin, conductor

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