Ars Nova Singers present ‘Rebirth: Beyond the Renaissance’ Feb. 9 and 11

Rare performance of Thomas Tallis’s 40-voice motet Spem in alium

By Peter Alexander Feb. 6 at 11:30 p.m.

Sometime around the year 1570, the English composer Thomas Tallis wrote what some have called his “crowning achievement.”

The work in question is more often discussed than heard: Spem in alium, a motet in 40 voices, arranged in eight choirs of five voices each. Anyone who studies the music of Elizabethan England knows of this impressive work, but it is difficult to assemble the voices for a performance, and many have never heard it live.

Ars Nova Singers

But now everyone in Boulder has the opportunity to experience this rare work in performance. Tom Morgan and the Ars Nova singers will perform Spem in alium Friday and Sunday in Boulder and Denver, respectively (Feb. 9 and 11; details and ticket information below). The full program, titled “Rebirth: Beyond the Renaissance,” also includes works by English composers William Byrd and Henry Purcell, music by Emilio de Cavalieri from a famously elaborate Medici family wedding in 1589, and the Mass in E-flat by the 19th-century German composer Josef Rheinberger.

This will actually be the seventh time that Morgan and Ars Nova have performed Tallis’s motet. The first time was in 1988, and they recorded the motet in 2001 on a CD titled Luminescence. Most recently they performed it in Boulder eight years ago. Only a few singers are still in the group from that performance, and a few have performed it elsewhere; performing it will be a new experience for the rest.

Manuscript of Thomas Tallis’s 40-part motet ’Spem in alium’

“I think that a group that can do it, should do every eight or 10 years at least, just because it’s a good stretch for the choir and it makes such a unique sound for the audience,” Morgan says. Because the 40 parts will each be taken by a single performer, “it does require a lot of independence on the part of the singers,” he says.

The 40 voices are divided into eight separate choirs of five voices each. “There’s a fair amount of historical context that this was originally done in an octagonal banqueting hall, so there was a choir in each of the eight bays,” Morgan says. “I think that was how Tallis conceived of it.

“Clearly he thought about it spatially. It moves from one side of the choir all the way across in a direct line to the other side. When the fortieth voice comes in and imitates that melody at the completion of the phrase, we reach the fortieth measure of the piece, and everybody comes in. It’s a very dramatic moment.”

The program moves chronologically from the late Renaissance forward. “The first half of this concert is all within about 20 years between about 1570 and 1590,” Morgan says. “Then (after intermission) we have Purcell, who is 100 years later.”

Two other pieces on the first half are worthy of attention. They were the final two pieces in the first book of choral music printed in England. Queen Elizabeth I had granted an exclusive right for music publishing to Tallis and his contemporary, William Byrd, and they ended the publication with what we might call puzzle pieces, one by each.

“They’re fascinating works,” Morgan says. “The first one (by Tallis, Miserere nostri) is a seven-voice canon. He derived it from one voice part, and then he does it two times slower, four times slower and eight times slower in three other parts.”  Three other parts combine in complex ways with those four, to make up the total of seven parts.

Byrd’s Diliges Dominum is complicated and interesting in an entirely different way. It is made up of four canons, in which pairs of singers hold a single copy of the music between them, looking at it from opposite sides. Each one reads it from the top to the bottom, as they are seeing the page, with their partner reading it in the opposite direction.

Josef Rheinberger

This sounds like some kind of compositional exercise, but, Morgan says, “what I like about both of these pieces is they don’t sound at all academic. They make lovely sounds—it’s really just sonically beautiful. That they are able to do that, given those strictures, is pretty amazing.”

Moving forward in time, the program ends firmly in the Romantic era with Rheinberger’s Mass in E-flat for double chorus, written in 1878. This is well outside of Ars Nova’s usual repertoire of either Renaissance or contemporary music. That might seem surprising, but “I’ve ways wanted to do this Mass because it’s a multi-voice piece, with two four-part choirs,” Morgan explains. 

“It has a lot of antiphonal chorus and a fair amount of imitation, so it does have a Renaissance feel, and yet it inhabits this 19th-century harmonic world which is so lush and wonderful!”

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“Rebirth: Beyond the Renaissance”
Ars Nova Singers, Thomas Morgan, conductor
With Szilvia Schranz, soprano, Brian du Fresne, harpsichord, and soloists from the chorus

  • I. Thomas Tallis: Loquebantur
    —Lamentations of Jeremiah, Set I
  • II. Two Musical Puzzles from Cantiones Sacrae, (1575)
    Tallis: Miserere nostri
    William Byrd: Diliges Dominum
  • III. Music from a Royal Wedding (Florence 1589)
    Emilio de Cavalieri: O che nuovo miracolo
  • IV.Tallis: Spem in alium
  • V. Henry Purcell: “If music be the food of love”
    —“Hear my prayer O Lord”
  • VI. Josef Rheiberger: Mass in E-flat for double chorus

7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 9
Mountain View United Methodist Church, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder

2:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 11
Central Presbyterian Church, 1660 No. Sherman St.,Denver

TICKETS

NOTE 2/7: The date of Ars Nova’s last previous performance of Spem in alium has been corrected to eight years ago. The original version of this story incorrectly stated that it was six year ago.

Seicento’s ‘Rare Byrd’ features viols, not ornithology

400th anniversary of English composer’s death brings varied program

By Peter Alexander Nov. 15 at 8:45 p.m.

The New York Times has called William Byrd “an essential English composer for four centuries.”

William Byrd

If you are not familiar with his music, he may be the greatest composer you don’t know. But observations this year of the 400th anniversary of his death show the esteem with which he is regarded by musicians.

Boulder’s Seicento Baroque Ensemble joins the party this weekend with “Rare Byrd,” a varied program of music for voices and viols that will be presented in Denver, Boulder and Longmont Friday, Saturday and Sunday respectively (details below).

A recusant Catholic in 17th-century England, when it was illegal to remain loyal to the Catholic Church, Byrd is best known to musicians for his settings of the Catholic Mass. These works, which could only be performed or circulated in private, are well known and frequently performed today within the early-music movement.

Seicento’s program is titled “Rare Byrd” because it avoids those celebrated mass settings and instead offers a variety of shorter, lesser known works. These rarities including madrigals, part songs, anthems and verse anthems. Conductor Evanne Browne says that when she was planning the concert, “it was a major turning point for me to think, ‘You know what? It’s OK [to omit the masses]. There’s so much that hasn’t been heard that audiences deserve to hear!’”

Available in several sizes, the viola da gamba looks like a cello, but has more strings and is played without an end pin.

Another turning point in planning the program was the decision to collaborate with five viola da gamba (viol) players. Only a few years ago, Seicento had to bring in viol players from Chicago in order to include them in a performance. Today, Browne says, “there are plenty of first-rate viol players in Colorado that are professional level.

“Using the viol consort is a joy. There’s so much fun to be had with consort songs and part songs and madrigals, and we’re doing some sacred things with the viol consort that normally would be done with organ. We’re having a great time!”

If you don’t know the different genres that Browne mentions, the madrigals are entertaining settings of secular poetry for voices, generally expressive texts about love and nature. They would often be performed in a social gathering, with people getting together in someone’s home to sing the latest madrigals. When these secular texts are sung by a soloist or soloists and accompanied by viols, then it is known as a part song or a consort song. 

The sacred pieces on the program are multi-voice settings of Psalms and other sacred texts. The verse anthems alternate between full choir and a soloist or, in one case, two soprano soloists. These pieces were often accompanied by organ in church, but they could also be performed with viols playing an arrangement of the organ part, which is how Seicento will present them.

Evanne Browne

In addition to the choral music, the viol consort will perform two pieces separately. One is a piece known as the “Browning Variations,” based on a folk song that was well known in Byrd’s time. “In the variations Byrd takes this little eight-measure theme and goes wild with it,” Browne explains. “(Byrd takes) that little bit and then just goes crazy, ‘let’s do duple (time), let’s do triple, let’s augment it, just change the rhythm’—that’s a lot of fun.”

The pieces sung by Seicento include some that are familiar to early-music enthusiasts, including the madrigals “The Fleet and Merry Month of May” and “Though Amaryllis Dance in Green.” Browne knows both from her experience singing in early-music ensembles, but there are also “a couple that I never heard of,” she says. One of these is “Who made thee, Hob, forsake the plough?”

Browne observes that this playful song is “one of those dialogs for shepherds,” a common type of madrigal text in the Renaissance. “I have two guys doing the solos with the viols, and talking about, what took you away from your work, Hob? And the answer of course is love.”

The inclusion of a number of anthems has also allowed Browne to explore repertoire she had not known before. “There are a couple of pieces on this concert that I could just do over and over and over again,” she says. “One is called ‘Christ Rising,’ which is a verse anthem. I’ve never sung that, even though it has two beautiful soprano solos. 

“When the soloists sing a verse the choir kind of echoes the main point, and it is just fabulous. The word painting is great. The beginning goes up (an interval of) a fourth, up a fifth, up a sixth, up a seventh—so the climax on the words ‘Christ rising’ is spectacular.”

One more factor Browne hopes people will recognize is how well Byrd writes for voices. “His music is just so easily sung,” she says. “Although some of the rhythms are killers. The rhythm’s always tricky, (but it’s) beautifully set for the voice. He can certainly set the words so that you know what it means. I’m really excited about this program.”

Her final thought for the audience? “Come with the expectation to be surprised at how wonderful and varied the music is.”

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“Rare Byrd”
Seicento Baroque Ensemble, Evanne Brown, conductor
With Adaiha MacAdam-Somer, Zoe Weiss, Sarah Graf, Sarah Biber and Karl Reque, viols

Music of William Byrd:

  • Haec Dies (anthem)
  • Praise our Lord, All ye Gentiles (anthem)
  • Have Mercy upon me, God (verse anthem)
  • Alack, when I look back (verse anthem)
  • Come Woeful Orpheus (madrigal)
  • Fantasia: Browning/The leaves be green (viol consort)
  • Christ Rising Again (verse anthem)
  • This Sweet and Merry Month of May (madrigal)
  • Ye Sacred Muses (elegy for Thomas Tallis)
  • If Women could be Fair (part song)
  • Who made, Thee, Hob? (part song)
  • Pavan and Galliard in A minor (viol consort)
  • Though Amarillis dance in green (madrigal)
  • O God that guides the cheerful sun (verse anthem)

7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 1600 Grant St., Denver
7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, Mountain View Methodist, 355 Ponca Place, Boulder
3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, United Church of Christ, 1500 9th St., Longmont

Tickets are available HERE in person for for all three performances and for the live stream of the Denver performance.