Hodie Christus Natus Est [Christmas Mass] / etc

Hodie Christus Natus Est [Christmas Mass] / etc cover $35.00 Out of Stock
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GIOVANNI PIERLUIGI da PALESTRINA
Hodie Christus Natus Est [Christmas Mass] / etc
The Sixteen, Harry Christophers

[ Coro Palestrina Edition Volume 2 / CD ]

Release Date: Monday 1 October 2012

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

Following the success of the first volume in their Palestrina series which won the International Classical Music Award for Early Music, Harry Christophers and The Sixteen release the second recording in the series which has a Christmas theme.

Palestrina was born in 1525 not far from Rome, in the town whose name he bore and from which we take the cover images for this series of discs.

Possibly the greatest composer of liturgical music of all time, Palestrina was a towering figure in Renaissance polyphony. Choral singers world-wide will know his Missa Papae Marcelli (recorded by The Sixteen on COR16014) as, without doubt, it is the most renowned of Palestrina's works and possibly the most famous mass of all time.

Each volume in this series is based around a single mass and theme relevant to that mass, in this case the Nativity and the festive Motet and Mass Hodie Christus Natus Est. The mass features alongside some of his settings of the Song of Songs as well as the Magnificat Quinti toni and Motet O magnum mysterium.

"The Sixteen let the music speak for itself, as they say. Festive spirit is here more a matter of inner feeling than outward show, as the repose of the Credo's inner movements testifies...It is done with the ensemble's near-immaculate poise and onn this showing their Palestrina cycle will rival (but also, I hope, complement) the Tallis Scholars'." (Gramophone)

Tracks:

Hodie Christus natus est
Christe, redemptor omnium
Magnificat Quinti toni
Tui sunt coeli
Reges Tharsis
Missa Hodie Christus natus est
Osculetur me osculo oris sui
Trahe me post te
Nigra sum sed formosa
O magnum mysterium