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Fretwork & The Choir Of Magdalen College, Oxford - Gibbons: With a Merrie Noyse - Second Service & Consort Anthems (2003)

Fretwork & The Choir Of Magdalen College, Oxford - Gibbons: With a Merrie Noyse - Second Service & Consort Anthems (2003)
  • Title: Gibbons: With a Merrie Noyse - Second Service & Consort Anthems
  • Year Of Release: 2003
  • Label: harmonia mundi
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:59:35
  • Total Size: 259 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. This is the record of John - [04:27]
02. Almighty and everlasting God - [02:28]
03. A Voluntary - [02:19]
04. The Second Service (Morning): Te Deum - [10:55]
05. The Second Service (Morning): Jubilate - [04:29]
06. Hymns and Songs for the Church: Song 1 - [01:26]
07. A Fancy for Double Organ - [05:49]
08. Hymns and Songs for the Church: Song 9 - [01:05]
09. The Second Service (Evening): Magnificat - [06:13]
10. The Second Service (Evening): Nunc dimittis - [03:39]
11. A Collection of the Sacred Compositions: No. 32, O Clap your Hands Together - [05:57]
12. Great King of Gods - [04:35]
13. See, see, the Word is incarnate - [06:17]

Several recordings have recently explored the largely neglected work of English composer Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625). But it is fitting that With a Merrie Noyse has been the one to receive a Grammy award nomination, for Best Small Ensemble Performance, in 2004. This U.S. industry award tends to be bestowed on good collaborations, and With a Merrie Noyse effectively brings together top forces from different areas of the early music community in an exploration of Gibbons' sacred music.
First there is the venerable Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford, where Gibbons never went out of style. They offer the Gibbons Second Service as well as anthems and other shorter choral pieces, interspersed with organ works. With its configuration, unchanged for centuries, of 16 boy singers and 12 adult men, the choir has this music bred in the bone and delivers clear, natural shapings of Gibbons' English texts. Works such as See, the Word is incarnate, with their Italian-madrigalian sense of text expression, come off beautifully here. Solo parts in the Second Service are taken by a quartet of top-notch singers, including countertenor Rogers Covey-Crump. And finally there is the viol consort Fretwork, which has been especially active in performing and recording music from this general time period. These are diverse talents, but they are brought together under the leadership of choir director Bill Ives in performances that beautifully realize this quintessentially English, and quintessentially Anglican, sacred music by a composer who took what he needed from wherever he could find it to form a style that proved the basis for England's distinctive local variant of Baroque style.




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