I'd like to also ask members to contribute their favourite Renaissance music. Along the lines of the Contemporary music thread, recommended recordings and works you consider as landmark masterpieces - Palestrina's Papae Marcelli Mass is mine to start off!
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I agree with you on that one, Peter - it is a magnificent piece. Really, the same could be said of so much of Palestrina's music that it's hard to single any of them out!
Much the same can be said for William Byrd, and I particularly like his Mass settings for 3, 4, and 5 voices.
Thomas Tallis is another favorite. If I had to pick one piece of his that really stands out, it would be Spem in alium, his motet for 40 voices (!).
As for recordings, the Tallis Scholars have first-rate recordings of works of all three of these composers, and I definitely recommend them. And if you really like Tallis, Brilliant has an excellent box set of his complete works by the Chapelle du Roi and Alastair Dixon for only $50, which is more than worth it.
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Originally posted by Sorrano View PostNot too long ago the radio broadcast some of Byrd's works and I found them enjoyable; they were instrumental, however.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyfZOZwuFM8'Man know thyself'
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We've got this one, by the great Jordi Savall, he makes the period live again and imho, he is far better that Eliot Gardener, though good he is too.
Monteverdi's - Orfeo.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxBT1pfVAKQ
Love this piece!‘Roses do not bloom hurriedly; for beauty, like any masterpiece, takes time to blossom.’
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Originally posted by Joy View PostIndeed both were beautiful selections. At one time I read that 'Greensleeves' might be a song that may have been written by King Henry VIII of England. This is probably one of the most famous tunes ever written from the Renaissance.
The anthology also contains 76 pieces by other musicians associated with the court, including William Cornysh and Robert Fayrfax, as well as some foreign composers, but there are more pieces attributed to Henry than to any other composer. Some of the King’s pieces are musical arrangements, but there are also many original compositions - however I think he may have been assisted in these by such as Fayrfax.
‘Pastyme with good companye’ is probably the most famous of these pieces.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vottDdrRSVk'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostGreensleeves is one of Mr.Anon's most famous hits, once attributed as you say to Henry VIII. Most of his extant pieces are in the Henry VIII Songbook, probably compiled around 1518, and includes 20 songs and 13 instrumental pieces ascribed to ‘The Kynge H. viij’.
The anthology also contains 76 pieces by other musicians associated with the court, including William Cornysh and Robert Fayrfax, as well as some foreign composers, but there are more pieces attributed to Henry than to any other composer. Some of the King’s pieces are musical arrangements, but there are also many original compositions - however I think he may have been assisted in these by such as Fayrfax.
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Originally posted by Peter View PostGreensleeves is one of Mr.Anon's most famous hits, once attributed as you say to Henry VIII. Most of his extant pieces are in the Henry VIII Songbook, probably compiled around 1518, and includes 20 songs and 13 instrumental pieces ascribed to ‘The Kynge H. viij’.
The anthology also contains 76 pieces by other musicians associated with the court, including William Cornysh and Robert Fayrfax, as well as some foreign composers, but there are more pieces attributed to Henry than to any other composer. Some of the King’s pieces are musical arrangements, but there are also many original compositions - however I think he may have been assisted in these by such as Fayrfax.
‘Pastyme with good companye’ is probably the most famous of these pieces.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vottDdrRSVk'Truth and beauty joined'
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostWhat at the present is considered to be Henry VIII's complete output can be found on one very nice Chandos CD, strongly recommended.'Truth and beauty joined'
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