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    Texte paru dans: / Appeared in:  | |
| Appréciation d'ensemble / Overall evaluation :     ½ | |
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Reviewer: Kate 
Bolton-Porciatti 
    
    An entire disc of funeral motets and deplorations might not 
    sound like fun, but Josquin’s music and the time less poetry of his texts 
    assuage and transcend. The beautifully shaped programme starts with 
    Josquin’s celebrated tributes to his older contemporary Ockeghem and closes 
    with Nicolas Gombert’s memorial to Josquin, the elegiac Musae Jovis. Both 
    composers thread the ‘Circum dederunt me’ plain chant into their works, so 
    the circular sequence creates a chain of echoes reflecting the chant’s 
    words: ‘The sorrows of death have encircled me’. Between these bookends, 
    progressing chronologically, are set tings of Biblical texts: David’s lament 
    on the death of his son Absalom, woven here into a muted musical shroud, and 
    the motet cycle Planxit autem David – the Israelite king’s plangent 
    outpourings for Saul and Jonathan, which Josquin carves into a lucid and 
    consolatory epitaph. Also associated with David are two psalm settings: the 
    dark five-part De profundis – with its haunting canonic writing – and the 
    monumental Miserere, which (unlike Allegri’s famously seraphic response) is 
    a starkly penitential work. | |
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