Music for the King of Scots

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Hyperion

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 55

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: CDA68333

CDA68333. Music for the King of Scots

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Horrendo subdenda rotarum machinamento Anonymous, Composer
Andrew Kirkman, Conductor
Binchois Consort
Dilexisti iustitiam Anonymous, Composer
Andrew Kirkman, Conductor
Binchois Consort
Horrendo subdenda rotarum machinamento 'Catherine Wheel Mass' Anonymous, Composer
Andrew Kirkman, Conductor
Binchois Consort
Magnificat Anonymous - Reniassance, Composer
Andrew Kirkman, Conductor
Binchois Consort
Ave Maria, mater Dei William Cornysh, Composer
Andrew Kirkman, Conductor
Binchois Consort

This latest release from The Binchois Consort represents early ‘musicking’ at its finest. The programme is built around music from the Carver Choirbook, thought to be associated with the seat of the Royal Chapel in Stirling and an important source of pre-Reformation music in Scotland. There is, however, another layer: this is a historically informed performance within a historic performance space – Linlithgow Palace – itself recreated in virtual reality. Musicology and music production triangulate James IV’s visits to Linlithgow Palace with the veneration of St Katherine and the Carver Choirbook in this very clever project. There’s even an accompanying app that enables you to listen with and without the VR chapel acoustic. What feels at first to be an intense claustrophobia quickly reveals itself to be the intimate, tapestried space of a private chapel where every detail of the singing is clear and close.

Missa Horrendo subdenda rotarum machinamento (c1460) would be much more famous were it securely attributed to a named composer. It’s a superb work and unjustly neglected until now. I really appreciate the way these singers navigate the juxtaposition of quicksilver duets with richer, full textures underpinned by the slower stability of a cantus firmus. Take the opening of the Gloria as an example of such enjoyable contrasts: the alto-tenor duet is full, rich and nimble, and there is an effortless segue into the fuller section. The sound is kept bright and perky by the silvery historic pronunciation. There is some really super singing here, particularly impressive considering it was recorded in an anechoic chamber before the VR chapel acoustic was applied.

The real showstopper on this programme is an anonymous Magnificat, whose verses alternate between joyfully rhythmic polyphony and a rich four-voice chant in the ‘fourth kind of faburdoun’. The immersive experience of this track in particular will stay with me for a long time.

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