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Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum
 
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Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum

Guillaume Dufay , French Anonymous , Gregorian Chant , Jeremy Summerly , Oxford Camerata , Carys-Anne Lane , Rebecca Outram , James Gilchrist , Robin Blaze , Robert Evans Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

Price: $11.31 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Missa L'homme arme: L'homme arme0:43$0.89 Buy Track
listen  2. Missa L'homme arme: Kyrie 4:56$0.89 Buy Track
listen  3. Missa L'homme arme: Gloria 8:55Album Only
listen  4. Missa L'homme arme: Veni Sancte Spiritus 2:21$0.89 Buy Track
listen  5. Missa L'homme arme: Credo12:47Album Only
listen  6. Missa L'homme arme: Jubilate Deo 3:14$0.89 Buy Track
listen  7. Missa L'homme arme: Sanctus10:09Album Only
listen  8. Missa L'homme arme: Agnus Dei 8:23Album Only
listen  9. Missa L'homme arme: Illumina faciem tuam 1:03$0.89 Buy Track
listen10. Supremum est mortalibus bonum 7:27$0.89 Buy Track


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Frequently Bought Together

Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum + Machaut: La Messe de Nostre Dame; Songs from Le Voir Dit + Josquin Desprez: Motets & Chansons
Price For All Three: $32.20

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  • Machaut: La Messe de Nostre Dame; Songs from Le Voir Dit $11.64

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  • Josquin Desprez: Motets & Chansons $9.25

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5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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35 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Recording of Dufay's Mass Plus, March 7, 2002
By 
Timothy Dougal (Madison, Wi United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum (Audio CD)
Dufay was the music master of the early Renaissance, and this disc contains his mass setting of the greatest hit of the later middle ages and Renaissance, "L'homme arme", plus recordings of the song itself as well as chants and motets utilizing the tune as their basis, worked in among the mass setting pieces. However, lest potential buyers think they are getting some kind of new agey, fluffy music here, this recording works very hard to be authentic, and the performance is more powerful than serene, more earthy than spacey, and majestic in a very medieval way. Summerly and company get these works very right.
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27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars DA VIRTUTIS MERITUM, November 8, 2004
By 
DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum (Audio CD)
Dufay's life seems to have been entirely within the 15th century. He was based at the abbey of Cambrai and seems to have enjoyed a wide reputation spreading as far as Scotland, where one of the manuscripts of this mass survives. The mass is a large-scale work, with a Sanctus lasting over ten minutes (which is a lot longer than, say, Verdi's), and an Agnus Dei taking well over eight. To complete the set there is a motet 'Supremum est mortalibus bonum' dating from the 1430's, and one very intriguing feature of this disc is the presence of an unharmonised 'Veni sancte spiritus' (sung to a popular tune) after the Gloria and two plainsong items 'Jubilate Deo' following the Credo and 'Illumina tu faciem' right at the end after the Agnus Dei. Sadly there is no illumination of this in the liner-note, which is really the most frightful guff saying next to nothing and saying it rather badly. Provisionally I have to assume that these numbers (all short) were sung at appropriate points during the celebration of the mass, otherwise what is the point of sequencing them in this way on the record? What I would have liked some guidance on is whether the composer envisaged these extras as integral parts of the setting of the mass - e.g. do they occur in the manuscripts, of which there are no fewer than four? Evidently I shall have to research this question elsewhere.

I am an admirer of the Oxford Camerata in general. As in their record of Josquin's mass based on the same chanson, there are 12 singers, those male these feminine as Milton puts it, numbering 7 and 5 respectively. I have read some comment that finds them prone to over-slow tempi, but I have been used to 15th and 16th century ecclesiastical polyphony all my life from childhood, and while I have no pretensions at all to being expert on the subject I suppose I can say that I find nothing untoward in any aspect of the Camerata's approach. The recording is predictably good, and the strength of the vocal tone impressed me.

English translations of the Latin are provided for everything here. These are in general accurate, although it is worth pointing out that towards the end of the Veni sancte 'Da...sacrum septenarium' means literally 'grant seven holy years', and 'da salutis exitum' means unequivocally 'grant final salvation'.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Masters' Masses were not for the Masses, June 11, 2008
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This review is from: Dufay: Missa L'homme armé; Supremum est mortalibus bonum (Audio CD)
Masses composed around the melody of the song L'Homme Arme (the Armed Man) are almost a genre onto themselves. Musicologically speaking, they are 'parody' masses, that is, polyphony compositions using the melodic themes and harmonic structures of a pre-existing chanson, often one with a secular text. Due partly to the odd jaunty quality of the L'Homme Arne theme, all of these masses are exceptionally colorful in rhythm and voicing, more sumptuous than pious, more flamboyant than devotional - a liturgical call to arms. Virtually every major composer of the 15th and 16th centuries wrote one; amazon currently lists performances of L'Homme Arme masses by Dufay, Busnois, Ockeghem, Josquin, Obrecht, de la Rue, Senfl, and Palestrina, as well as less well-known composers like Robert Carver, Mattheus Pipelare, Johannes Tinctoris, Juan de Anchieta, Johannes Regis, Cristobal Morales, and Mathurin Forestier.

Why so many? It used to be supposed that the composers felt motivated by professional competition and/or eagerness to meet a sublime challenge to their skills. There may well be truth to that notion, but a more practical factor is almost certainly involved. Such masses were written on commission, for pecuniary reward, and the commissions for these masses, as far as we know, came entirely from very potent patrons - kings, dukes, archbishops and such, the movers-and-shakers of Renaissance Europe - and most of these patrons were prominent members of an international confraternity called The Order of the Golden Fleece, which held convocations at significant times and places. A modern analogy might be the annual convocation of big shots at Bohemian Grove in northern California, although as far as I know the Bohemian Club has never commissioned a significant piece of music. The Golden Fleece had its own theme song, which was... L'Homme Arme!

I've never heard a L'Homme Arme mass that I didn't like. Obviously not all performances are equally successful, but the challenge of composing a new mass in full awareness of the greatness of previous compositions does seem to have inspired people. Dufay's L'Homme Arme was composed in the 1460s, at a time when Dufay was wealthy and renowned, and approaching old age. Interestingly, it shows the master being strongly influenced by his own disciples; Dufay extends his usual sweet Burgundian polyphony to match the riotous mannerism of younger men like Busnois and Ockeghem. Even so, Dufay's melodic delicacy survives in this most rhythmically electrifying context, making his L'Homme Arme one of the most accessible to modern listeners.

The Oxford Camerata performance begins with a unison chanting of the basic L'Homme Arme melody, a helpful gesture for the uninitiated listener. Then director Jeremy Summerly chooses to separate the movements of the mass with chanted monophonic antiphons, an authentic liturgical parctice, and to conclude the performance with the polyphonic motet Supremum est Mortalibus Bonum, written by the much younger Dufay in about 1430. It's a good choice, allowing the listener to hear the compositional distance Dufay and his disciples had traversed in thirty years.

The Oxford Camerata is a choir twelve voices, men and women, all Britons, bearing such charming British names as Alison Coldstream and Julian Smallbones. It's an excellent choir - better I think than the Tallis Scholars and other similar ensembles, having clearer diction and an more incisive collective timbre - and although I'd prefer to hear this mass performed in recording by singers one on a part, I'm certainly pleased with this CD and recommend it heartily.
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