😀Thank you Pannonia. I believe this is a masterpiece by a man at the height of his powers, who knew exactly what he wanted to say musically, with many memorable phrases, clever use of rhythms, and a constant sense of forward motion. The Tallis Scholars perform it beautifully.
This is one of the most complex pieces of vocal music in terms of tempo, meter changes, and rhythm I have ever heard. Beautiful! Tallis was a master of polyphony!
Heard the Tallis scholars perform this last Thursday, simply sensational, where it not for the fact that they then went on to perform 'Spem in alium', this would have been the highlight of the evening
8:23-8:27 Sup I is singing a 3 (in score, marked to be sung as a flatted 3) same time as S.P. II comes in with a flatted 3rd octave up, sounding to modern ear like a #9. m 171.
Superb! I really like Tallis and scholars named after him.
😀Thank you Pannonia. I believe this is a masterpiece by a man at the height of his powers, who knew exactly what he wanted to say musically, with many memorable phrases, clever use of rhythms, and a constant sense of forward motion. The Tallis Scholars perform it beautifully.
This is one of the most complex pieces of vocal music in terms of tempo, meter changes, and rhythm I have ever heard. Beautiful! Tallis was a master of polyphony!
Sensational, Pneumonia.....and Thank You.....from San Agustinillo, Oaxaca!
Thanks very much for posting this! And thanks for the work to produce the scrolling score.
It seems that the scrolling score is taken from my edition of Gaude Gloriosa which is available at CPDL.
Yes. Thank you for this score. I take the scores for my videos from CPDL or IMSLP (i.e. freely available scores).
May I ask how you make the scrolling versions?
@@CatholicCulturePod I (gemstone) didn't make the video, I'm just a commentator. Your question belongs at the top level, to the video uploader.
@@charlesgiffen3036 It is a very fine score. Thank you
Heard the Tallis scholars perform this last Thursday, simply sensational, where it not for the fact that they then went on to perform 'Spem in alium', this would have been the highlight of the evening
Tom Wood Blood Target brings me here
8:23-8:27 Sup I is singing a 3 (in score, marked to be sung as a flatted 3) same time as S.P. II comes in with a flatted 3rd octave up, sounding to modern ear like a #9. m 171.
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