Beautifully executed, gracefully nuanced, above all, express
Claude Greenmount | The Universe | 09/06/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This recording is important not just for making an unknown masterpiece available once again, but for the perfection of the performance and the attention to musical and historical detail. The voices are supported by an instrumental ensemble woven so well into the vocal texture as to become part and parcel of the performance, rather than simply backing up or coloring the polyphony. The phrases are carefully shaped and the diction crystal clear. No 'high' voices are present (no sopranos are called for in the score) and it would be easy for the vocal texture (ATTB) to become very dense and weighty, but Noone and his performers never let this happen. Each line is clearly sung/played and parts emerge from the texture at the appropriate moments.
With the exception of Victoria, many composers from the Spanish Renaissance remain unknown or at best, under-appreciated in the USA. Hopefully this fine performance will encourage many to seek out more music of this great 16th century master, along with that of his fine compatriots."
A shining blackness
Smith | Hungary | 12/19/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Guerrero, a very important but nowadays unfortunately neglected figure in the XVI. century "international" music, wrote a very impressive, ruthless, anthracian "service" what we may call "Requiem". The cover with its plain and suggestive manner also reflects the profound understanding of the work.
The performance is superb. Musically and electronically. Listen to it regularly."
Francisco Guerrero: Requiem
Gary Towne | Grand Forks, ND USA | 03/25/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Cristóbal de Morales: Assumption Mass
Spanish music and its history, although of globe-girdling significance, has often suffered from anglophone writers, at worst contempt and at best neglect, ever since Spain was branded the evil empire in 1588. Only in recent decades have scholars begun to correct this monumental omission. Michael Noone is becoming one of the leaders of the cause. Let me admit up front that I have known Michael for 25 years, although we have actually met only a few times during that period. Partly because I have followed his career, I was thrilled when he began issuing recordings of the music that has been the object of his devotion. Francisco Guerrero: Requiem is the second of four recordings he has done on Glossa with Richard Cheetham's Orchestra of the Renaissance (the others: Canticum Canticorum, Cristóbal de Morales-Assumption Mass, and Sebastián de Vivanco-In Manus Tuas).
One of his purposes in these recordings has been to convince the world that the combination of singers with cornett, shawms, sackbuts, dulcian, organ, and harp that is described in the records actually works. He proves it, in spades! The performances on these recordings are among the most musical interpretations of sixteenth-century polyphony I have ever heard. Given the limitation that it is all sacred music, the mood, style, and instrumentation show great variety: vocal, instrumental, polyphony, chant, ensemble, solo. The Guerrero Requiem (and the Assumption Mass) are liturgical reconstructions of scholarly precision, while the other two recordings are anthologies. All are superbly performed and definitively refute scoffers who assert that this music or these instruments cannot be performed to modern standards. The performances include spare, stark Gregorian chant as well as rich, voluptuous polyphony. The shaping of musical lines, timbre, and intonation are exquisitely refined. Tempos are beautifully controlled and absolutely convincing. These performances combine consummate musicianship with meticulous musicology, evident in the use of instrumentation described in local period documents and local Gregorian chant, not to mention the fact that Michael Noone has transcribed this music and done the archival research himself. His soup-to-nuts productions are archetypal illustrations of what can be achieved by the combination of excellent scholarship and exemplary musicianship. This is also evident in the exceptionally clear and informative program notes.
Michael Noone's sumptuous recordings of Spanish Renaissance Music should grace the shelves of every audiophile. I have bought them all, and these days, I find myself listening to little else!"
Awesome music, astonishingly well performed and recorded
El Chapulín | 02/18/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Guerrero is one of that extraordinary triumvirate of Spanish Renaissance polyphonists. In his own day, he was more celebrated even than Victoria. And this superb recording explains exactly why. You can't go wrong with Noone's wonderfully subtle reading of this marvellous music."