[ Avie / CD ]
Release Date: Saturday 11 September 2010
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"Recorded in New York's Cathedral of St John the Divine, these are beautifully blended voices of individual distinction"
(The Independent)
"The transitions between the ages are seemlessly effected, particularly impressive during back-to-back old and new performances of "Magnificat À Quatre". Recorded in New York's Cathedral of St John the Divine, these are beautifully blended voices of individual distinction"
(The Independent)
"I have never been to the Cathedral Church of St John the Divine in New York, so I can't vouch for its acoustics; but so powerfully is its presence felt here that it might as well have been given equal billing with the four singers of New York Polyphony." (Gramophone)
New York Polyphony's second release for Avie is a compelling fusion of Tudor masterpieces from Byrd, Tallis, Taverner and others and contemporary works by Oslo-based English composer Andrew Smith.
Classical vocal quartet New York Polyphony struck a chord with their 2007 Avie debut, 'I Sing the Birth' (AV2141). An intimate meditation on the Christmas season, it garnered unanimous praise on both sides of the pond. For Gramophone Magazine it was "one of the season's best", and it was an Editor's Christmas Choice in BBC Music Magazine. For their second release, the all-male foursome delivers their signature fusion of historically informed performances in a range of styles. Interspersed between sacred masterpieces of Tudor England are four new works by British-Norwegian composer Andrew Smith, adding a modern harmonic richness and complexity to the album. The result is a compelling synthesis of ancient and contemporary vocal music. New York Polyphony extends the mix of old world and new in the album's title, named for the distinctive 19th-century neighbourhood on Manhattan's East Side which is pictured in the striking cover design.
anon.:
Flos regalis (c. 14th century)
Byrd:
Ave verum Corpus
Cornyshe:
Gaude virgo mater Christi
Dunstaple:
Speciosa facta es
Lamb, W:
Stella caeli
Smith, A:
Flos regalis
Surrexit Christus
To mock your reign
Magnificat à 4
Tallis:
O come in one to praise the Lord
Expend, O Lord
Audivi vocem de caelo
Why Fum'th in Fight?
Man blest no doubt
God Grant we grace (Tallis Canon)
Taverner:
Magnificat a 4 - Nesciens mater
Tye:
In pace in idipsum