℗ 2020 Signum Records
Released | February 5, 2021 |
Duration | 1h 07m 17s |
Record Label | Signum Records |
Catalogue No. | SIGCD633 |
Genre | Classical (Choral) |
The Sweetest Songs
Contrapunctus, Owen Rees
Available in 96 kHz / 24-bit AIFF, FLAC high resolution audio formats
1.1
|
Domine, non est exaltatum
Robert White; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
8:43 | |||
1.2
|
Tristitia et anxietas
William Byrd; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
9:35 | |||
1.3
|
In te Domine speravi
John Mundy; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees; Alice Hulett; Ruth Provost; David Gould |
8:02 | |||
1.4
|
Confitebor tibi Domine
Anonymous; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
3:36 | |||
1.5
|
Peccavi super numerum
William Byrd; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
6:00 | |||
1.6
|
Domine quis habitabit
Robert Parsons; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
3:56 | |||
1.7
|
Memor esto verbi tui
William Mundy; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
7:13 | |||
1.8
|
Confitebor tibi Domine
John Sheppard; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
6:14 | |||
1.9
|
Ne perdas cum impiis
William Byrd; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
4:52 | |||
1.10
|
Confitebor tibi Domine
William Daman; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
2:25 | |||
1.11
|
Portio mea
Robert White; Contrapunctus; Owen Rees |
6:41 |
Contrapunctus concludes its exploration of the music preserved in John Baldwin’s partbooks with a third album dedicated to this remarkable treasure house of English sacred music, the richest single source of Tudor polyphony to survive. This third recording opens a window on a striking aspect of the history of the English motet, and one that has been neglected: the penchant in England for setting Latin psalms as motets, the so-called ‘psalm motet’.
These texts offered rich opportunity for vivid musical response, given their nature as personal and impassioned addresses to God, and led to Richard Sampson – Dean of the English Chapel Royal under Henry VIII – describing the psalms as ‘the sweetest songs’. The principal English composers born between the 1510s and the 1530s all contributed to this genre of motet, but to a significant extent this fascinating repertory has lain in obscurity and remains unfamiliar to modern audiences.
More than half of the works on this album are premiere recordings, and they include such glorious motets as Robert White’s Domine, non est exaltatum, William Mundy’s Memor esto verbi tui, and John Sheppard’s Confitebor tibi Domine. Contrapunctus’s trademark combination of ground-breaking scholarship and performances that are ‘revelatory and even visionary’ (BBC Music Magazine) here brings to light and to life some of the finest musical survivals of the Tudor age.
96 kHz / 24-bit PCM – Signum Records Studio Masters
Track title | Peak (dB FS) | RMS (dB FS) | LUFS (integrated) | DR | |
Album average Range of values | -1.31 -4.02 to -0.30 | -20.03 -22.87 to -17.48 | -16.86 -19.70 to -14.40 | 12 11 to 13 | |
1 | Domine, non est exaltatum | -0.30 | -19.30 | -16.1 | 12 |
2 | Tristitia et anxietas | -3.52 | -22.87 | -19.7 | 12 |
3 | In te Domine speravi | -0.58 | -18.75 | -15.5 | 12 |
4 | Confitebor tibi Domine | -1.46 | -20.49 | -17.4 | 12 |
5 | Peccavi super numerum | -1.00 | -21.20 | -18.1 | 12 |
6 | Domine quis habitabit | -0.30 | -17.48 | -14.4 | 11 |
7 | Memor esto verbi tui | -0.74 | -20.22 | -17.3 | 13 |
8 | Confitebor tibi Domine | -0.77 | -18.80 | -15.7 | 11 |
9 | Ne perdas cum impiis | -4.02 | -22.46 | -19.1 | 12 |
10 | Confitebor tibi Domine | -1.09 | -20.24 | -17.0 | 11 |
11 | Portio mea | -0.58 | -18.56 | -15.2 | 11 |