タリス・スコラーズ新録音!
初のフェアファックス・アルバム!
1973年の結成から現在まで、ルネサンス宗教音楽演奏の世界最高峰としての地位を確立し続けてきた"究極のポリフォニー" タリス・スコラーズ。2024年6月に5年ぶりとなる来日公演を大成功させたタリス・スコラーズの新録音は、彼らにとって初となるロバート・フェアファックスのアルバムが実現!
イングランド王ヘンリー7世とヘンリー8世の時代でもっとも著名で影響力のあったイギリス・ルネサンスの作曲家、ロバート・フェアファックスは、その並外れた膨大な作品によって、イートン・クワイアブックとタリスの間の溝を埋めており、これらの4つのアンティフォン(アンティフォナ)で彼が成し遂げたような表現力は、彼以前には誰にも達成できませんでした。
タリス・スコラーズは、これまで世界中のコンサートでこれらの4つのアンティフォンをライヴ演奏してきた長い歴史があり、ピーター・フィリップスが「すべての英国音楽学習者が、先駆的で非常に優れた作品として学ぶべき」と評価するフェアファックスの麗しき音楽を、至高のポリフォニーで披露します。今作でも、名エンジニア、フィリップ・ホッブスによる優秀録音も健在。
東京エムプラス
発売・販売元 提供資料(2024/08/22)
The Tallis Scholars are among the most durable English Renaissance a cappella groups on the scene, and their vocal blend remains unsurpassed. They can put out many recordings over the course of a year, and each will be eagerly awaited; indeed, this one landed on classical best-seller charts in the late autumn of 2024. The group has often recorded the music of its namesake and of other composers of the High Renaissance, English and not, but the Scholars are equally effective in earlier English music, where the thoughtful approach of director Peter Phillips pays big dividends. Consider Robert Fayrfax (1464-1521), a composer much admired by Henry VIII and, for many listeners, just a name from the music history books. Those who know him at all may link him to the ornate, seemingly random polyphony of the Eton Choirbook (ca. 1500), where some of his works appear. However, the highly useful booklet notes by Phillips find something different in Fayrfax, a move in the direction of a more text-centered approach. Phillips backs this up with his presentation of the music, which is mostly broken down to a single track (the tracks run continuously for each of the four antiphons included) for each line of the text. This brings out the passing flavors of the music nicely, and it is not too much to say, as Phillips does, that the music creates a "deeply emotive atmosphere." For general listeners, that deep emotion may be a little difficult to catch, but give it a try. In the meantime, there is the beautiful singing of The Tallis Scholars, operating in the black-belt territory of two singers per part. The music is ideally recorded at Merton College Chapel, Oxford, and full texts are provided, showing the fun acrostic in the final antiphon, Eterne laudis lilium. This album is a must for lovers of the early and middle English Renaissance, but it can also be recommended to listeners wanting to develop more of a feel for the music of this period. ~ James Manheim
Rovi