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Tallis - Spem in alium
Magnificat
Awards:
-
Building a Library, October 2004, First Choice
This is quite simply the best performance of Tallis's 40-part Spem in alium to date. Sung by a constellation of singers, many of them familiar names from other wellestablished choral groups,...
Tallis - Spem in alium
Magnificat
Purchase product
Awards:
-
Building a Library, October 2004, First Choice
This is quite simply the best performance of Tallis's 40-part Spem in alium to date. Sung by a constellation of singers, many of them familiar names from other wellestablished choral groups,...
About
Contents and tracklist
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: November 1995
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hampstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: November 1995
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hamstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: June 1997
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hampstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: November 1995
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hampstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: November 1995
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hampstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: January 2000
- Recording Venue: St. Mary the Virgin, Buckland, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: January 2000
- Recording Venue: St. Mary the Virgin, Buckland, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: June 1997
- Recording Venue: St. Jude's on the Hill, Hampstead, England, United Kingdom
- Magnificat, Philip Cave
- Recorded: January 2000
- Recording Venue: St. Mary the Virgin, Buckland, England, United Kingdom
Awards and reviews
2010
This is quite simply the best performance of Tallis's 40-part Spem in alium to date. Sung by a constellation of singers, many of them familiar names from other wellestablished choral groups, it's a gripping realisation.
The effect of the slowly moving harmonies is enhanced by a well-conceived and very positive use of dynamics. Precise entries, gently undulating rhythms that are wonderfully supple, and then those firm antiphonal phrases – one group of choirs answered by another at 'Creator coeli et terra' – raise the tension, until we twice almost miss a heart-beat at the well-placed rest before 'Respice …'.
That great motet, so central to the whole programme, is well supported by the four-part Mass and the delightful group of other pieces for various combinations of voices. The hymn Te lucis with its alternating chant strophes sounding so very English (almost too perfect for what was, after all, just run-of-the-mill everyday chant!) has the tempo relationship of the chant to the polyphony just right, which is a tremendous plus, rarely achieved.