Cappella Pratensis - Missa Ave Maris Stella (2014) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Cappella Pratensis
Title: Missa Ave Maris Stella
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Cappella Pratensis
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 01:00:27
Total Size: 1.06 gb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Missa Ave Maris Stella
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Cappella Pratensis
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 01:00:27
Total Size: 1.06 gb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Hymnus: Ave maris stella
02. Introitus: Rorate Celi
03. Missa Ave Maris Stella: I. Kyrie
04. Missa Ave Maris Stella: II. Gloria
05. Graduale: Tollite Portas
06. Alleluia: Ave Maria
07. Missa Ave Maris Stella: III. Credo
08. Offertorium: Ave Maria
09. Motet: Mittit ad Virginum
10. Prefatio
11. Missa Ave Maris Stella: IV. Sanctus
12. Pater Noster
13. Missa Ave Maris Stella: V. Agnus Dei
14. Communio: Ecce virgo
15. Motet: Missus est Gabriel angelus
The Dutch-based vocal ensemble Cappella Pratensis was founded in 1987, and is renowned for championing the music of Josquin Desprez and other polyphonists of the 15th and 16th centuries. On this recording they perform Josquin’s Missa Ave maris stella under the direction of the ensemble’s current conductor Stratton Bull.
Cappella Pratensis combines historically informed performance practice with inventive programmes and original interpretations based on scholarly research and artistic insight. As in Josquin’s time, the members of Cappella Pratensis perform from a central music stand, singing from the original notation scored in a large choir book. This approach, together with attention to the linguistic origin of the compositions and the modal system on which it is based, offers a unique perspective on the repertoire.
This recording aims to recapture a sense of the ceremonial context that would have surrounded Josquin’s sacred polyphony, in this case the Saturday Mass for the Blessed Virgin that took place is the Sistine Chapel in Rome during Advent. In order to approach closer to the original performance practices of the papal chapel, Cappella Pratensis here sings whenever possible from scale copies of the very books used by the papal chapel.
Here, as then, the ensemble is all male (there were no boys in the papal chapel) and the number of singers is small, just two to a part, with duo and trio sections taken by solo voices. In light of the fact that most papal singers in this period were native Frenchspeakers, the Latin of Josquin’s polyphony as well as the Proper plainsongs is sung with a French accent.
For Challenge Classics, Cappella Pretensis have previously recorded Requiems by Ockeghem and De La Rue (CC72541) and ‘Vivat Leo! Music for a Medici Pope’ (with Joshua Rifkin, CC72366).