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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dufay would be proud,
This review is from: Dufay: Music for St. James the Greater (Audio CD)
Guillaume Dufay (c. 1397-1474) was arguably the dominant composer of the 15th century, and a crucial figure in music history. Dufay successfully blended the two major musical developments of the early 15th century - the imperfect consonances (3rds and 6ths) popularized by English composers such as Dunstable, and the rhythmic advances of Continental composers such as Ciconia - thus forging a new style that would become the foundation of Renaissance music. Dufay mastered both sacred and secular forms, and directly influenced younger contemporaries such as Ockeghem and Busnoys. Many musicologists credit later composers, such as Josquin or Obrecht, with developing the "learned style" of pervasive imitation that dominated Renaissance polyphony. However, the elements of the learned style had their genesis - however elementary - in the music of Dufay.
"The Mass for St. James the Greater" is an early Dufay plenary Mass (c. 1427), which includes not only the movements of the Mass Ordinary (Gloria, Kyrie, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei) but also the Proper movements (Introit, Alleluia, Offertory and Communio). Scholars have identified the Communio as the first documented use of "fauxbourdon" - a quasi-improvisatory technique that supported the highest voice with parallel first inversion chords, thereby emulating the "sweet sound" of the English composers. The Binchois Consort, led by Andrew Kirkman, performs not only the entire Mass for St. James the Greater, but associated motets ("Rite majorem Jacobum" and "Apostolo Glorioso") from approximately the same period. The Mass is not top-shelf Dufay, but instead captures the composer in a formative, developmental phase. Dufay would go on to master the Cyclic Mass with works such as "Missa Se la face ay pale" and "Missa L'homme arme," and thereby establish the standards to which composers of 15th century sacred music aspired. The motets showcase Dufay's skill with shorter sacred forms, a genre that Dufay would master with "Nuper rosarum flores" (1436). Some may criticize the composition of the Binchois Consort (eight male adults), but Dufay did not always have large vocal ensembles to compose for, especially early in his career. Male sopranos can be an acquired taste, but the Binchois Consort delivers tasteful, impeccable performances. The acoustics are astounding and the production values are pristine. Dufay would be proud that his early works have received such sensitive handling, nearly six centuries after their composition.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great!,
By Micky "micky21" (St. Louis, MO USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Dufay: Music for St. James the Greater (Audio CD)
This mass is not popular. However, the mixture of medieval and Renaissance styles is really beautiful. This is certainly a Dufay's music: deep, warm, mesmeric, and confortable. Kirkman's performance is also unbelievable. This is one of the best recordings of Dufay's.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The More Things Change ...,
By Giordano Bruno (Wherever I am, I am.) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
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This review is from: Dufay: Music for St. James the Greater (Audio CD)
It's interesting how hard it is to think about evolution without lapsing into a discourse of Progress - of 'Entwicklung', development, improvement. But the bottom line of evolution is contingent and constant change, not improvement. You, dear reader, are no more highly evolved than a green sea turtle, nor any more complex than an army ant; you simply value your own complexity disproportionately.
The history of music also suffers from a discourse of 'development'. Perceptive listeners can still be trapped in the notion that the imitative counterpoint of Josquin is more 'advanced' than the seldom-imitative polytextual polyphony of Dufay. Quatsch! Nobody has ever written more 'advanced' music than Dufay... not Josquin, not Bach, not Beethoven, not Wagner, not even Brian Wilson. You have only your two ears, you know, through which all the ambient sound funnels to your brain, and 'what you hear is what you hear.' Music in Europe did CHANGE rather dramatically in the short span of time between Guillaume Dufay (1400-1474) and Josquin Desprez (1455-1521). The most easily quantifiable change was the shift in 'prolations', from preponderantly "perfect" (triple) tempi to "imperfect" (duple) tempi. You can hear that change by comparing any performance you have of Dufay to any of Josquin's disciples like Mouton or Willaert. That change was symptomatic of a change in the most basic mode of "hearing" music, which I can describe as a change from Time to Space. The aesthetic core of Dufay's music is the passage of Time; one hears it 'horizontally' - in the flow of Time captured as immediate sensual perceptions. The consummate craft of Dufay's music is its rhythmic inventiveness. By comparison, Josquin's music is 'all about' melody, which is a sort of derived experience based on Memory. No memory, no melody! Thus Josquin's music is less about Time and more about Space, or Spaces ... music conceived architecturally and heard as much vertically as horizontally. (I hope that makes sense; if it doesn't, blame it on too many cups of espresso.) And what about this recording of Dufay's "Mass for Saint James the Greater' by the eight male singers of the Binchois Consort? Put simply, we ought to beatify Saint Andrew Kirkman the Greatest. Contrary to one utterly foolish earlier review, such a performance by a small choir of men, including falsettists, was absolutely the norm in Dufay's era; in fact, any other kind of performance would defy all historical scholarship and, to my ears, defile the music. How could a large choir in a reverberant space make any acoustic sense of such music? But beyond authenticity, there's the artistry of the singers to be reckoned with, and these guys of the Binchois Consort are astonishingly good, each 'pair' of them in precise accord and all eight of them in Swiss-watch tight ensemble, both of tuning and of rhythmic expression. The overlapping prolations of this mass -- polyrhythms, you could call them -- are the flowers of Burgundian musical craft, and the Binchois boys nail them all like perfect-score gymnasts. Besides the Mass for St James, this performance includes three wonderful polyphonic antiphons by Dufay, plus two mass movements (Gloria & Credo) in a different vein, full of Italian song snatches and popular musical touches that suggest Dufay's awareness of the "laudesi", the singers of the mostly bourgeois confraternities of Italy, where the Burgundian Dufay spent time. The Credo is one of the most 'amusing' pieces of liturgical polyphony you'll ever hear. I can hardly believe that other reviewers have treated this CD so shabbily. It's the most polished and enjoyable performance of Dufay yet offered to the modern public.
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