Music for the Court of Maximilian II

All three composers were variously attached to the Habsburg court in the middle of the sixteenth century and the music of all three amply reveals both the richness of the mid-century style and the careful craftsmanship they brought to it. Cinquecentoís program is devoted to a mass and several motets from the Habsburg orbit by these three with an additional motet by Lasso. The program coheres not only through contextual proximity, but more significantly by the way the pieces reflect musicís function within a web of patronage. Some of the motets (Maessenís ìDiscessuî and Lassoís ìPacis amansî) explicitly name Maximilian, and these form a direct salute to the House of Habsburg. The text of Vaetís motet, ìAscendetis post filium,î is dedicated in praise of Maximilian; he is not named in the text specifically, although the theme is one of monarchical succession, possibly written for his assuming the throne of Bohemia or Hungary. This salute to Maximilian is furthered in Galliís imitation mass based on Vaetís motet, and significantly, the salute to the patron also becomes a salute to Vaet, as well–a two-fold doffing of the compositional hat!
The performances are sublime. Cinquecento offers a sumptuous sound, exquisitely focused and yet rich in tone, as the opening motet, Vaetís ìVidens Dominus,î reveals from its very first notes. The contrapuntal style of the pieces is generally dense, although the ensembleís lines are unflaggingly lithe, taming the density with clarity. And the suppleness of line is matched with a fluid sense of melisma, as in the flowing passage work of the ìBenedictusî in Galliís mass. Other moments are characterized by the ensembleís finely crafted control, as in the ìEt incarnatusî from the mass, or the beautiful stillness of some of the final chords.
The bass of Cinquecento, Ulfried Staber, sings with an especially gratifying sound, a delight in itself, of course, but also a sound that seems foundational for the ensemble tone as a whole. It is as though his sound is ìpulled upî through the other registers, yet remains in place as both model and fundament.
The Music of Maximilian II is a splendid recording of music that is refreshingly little-known, sung with consummate skill and artistry.
Steven Plank


image=http://www.operatoday.com/Max_II.png
image_description=Music for the Court of Maximilian II
product=yes
product_title=Music for the Court of Maximilian II
product_by=Cinquecento
product_id=Hyperion CDA67579 [CD]
price=$21.99
product_url=http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/Catalog?catalog_num=67579&x=0&y=0