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Peter Phillips, The Tallis Scholars - Lamenta: Ferrabosco, Tallis, Brumel, White, Palestrina (1998)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Peter Phillips, The Tallis Scholars - Lamenta: Ferrabosco, Tallis, Brumel, White, Palestrina (1998)

Peter Phillips, The Tallis Scholars - Lamenta: Ferrabosco, Tallis, Brumel, White, Palestrina (1998)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 285 Mb | Total time: 72:45 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Gimel | # CDGIM 996 | Recorded: 1992, 1995, 1998

Turn down the lights and get out your joss-sticks for this one: a selection of sixteenth-century Tenebrae music for Holy Week, among the most evocative parts of the liturgy. Since they had already made successful recordings of the Brumel, Tallis and White, it was a good idea for The Tallis Scholars to add new recordings of Tenebrae settings by Alfonso Ferrabosco the Elder and Palestrina. As Peter Phillips points out in his brief note, the only textual feature they have in common is their all ending with the passage “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, convertere ad Dominum Deum tuum”. Otherwise the texts that the various composers selected from the Lamentations of Jeremiah are quite different; but all show an intensity and a devotional power that work cumulatively to produce a remarkably satisfying disc. And it is endlessly fascinating to hear the different approaches to these anguished texts.

Rose Consort of Viols - Alfonso Ferrabosco: Consort Music (2003)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Rose Consort of Viols - Alfonso Ferrabosco: Consort Music (2003)

Rose Consort of Viols - Alfonso Ferrabosco: Consort Music (2003)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 375 Mb | Total time: 75:36 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | # 999 859-2 | Recorded: 1997

Under the single name, Alfonso, lie two composers, father and son. The strongest bond between them must have been composing; there was precious little else, since Ferrabosco the Elder fled England precipitously in the year his son and namesake was born. As viol players they had some influence on developments in their adoptive land. They are well known to viol players today, and what is presented here, with father and son in alternation, is of far more than academic interest.