Tracklista:  Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina 1. Motettorum liber quartus ex Canticis canticorum (Roma 1584) 2. Pulchrae sunt genae tuae 3. Sicut lilium inter spinas 4. Surge, propera amica formosa mea 5. Quam pulchra es 6. Veni, dilecte mi  Jean L'Heritier 7. Nigra sum sed formosa  Jachet de Mantua 8. Audi, dulcis amica mea  Nicolas Gombert 9. Quam pulchra es 10. Magnificat Sexti et Primi Toni  Josquin Desprez 11. Ave Maria/Virgo serena


  • Wykonawca Cappella Mariana
  • Data premiery 2018-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Wydawnictwo przedstawia historię życia Lukrecji Borgii, jednej z najważniejszych postaci włoskiego renesansu, która wywarła duży wpływ na politykę oraz kulturę swojej epoki. Utwory takich kompozytorów jak Constanzo Festa, Heinrich Isaac, Tromboncino, Alexander Agricola, Josquin Desprez, Jacques Arcadelt i inni są ilustracją wydarzeń z jej życia. Wykonawcy to hiszpański zespół Capella de Ministrers pod dyrekcją Carlesa Magranera.


  • Wykonawca Capella de Ministrers
  • Data premiery 2019-05-17
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Ave Maria 00:05:39 2. L'homme arme 00:00:42 3. Kyrie 00:04:27 4. Gloria 00:07:35 5. Credo 00:10:41 6. Laeta Dies 00:02:26 7. Sanctus 00:06:17 8. Agnus Dei 00:09:16 9. Absalon, fili mi 00:04:32 10. Lament on the death of Josquin 00:04:24


  • Wykonawca Summerly Jeremy
  • Data premiery 1998-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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„Płyta, którą oddajemy w Państwa ręce, jest skromnym podsumowaniem ogromnego dorobku zespołu, ale jest też naszym włączeniem się w rocznicowe obchody niepodległościowe.Znaleźć można na niej przekrój utworów, od „Bogurodzicy” po rodzimą twórczość współczesną. Są tutaj m.in. kompozycje związane z licznymi zrywami niepodległościowymi. Płytę zamyka „Missa Solemnis homage à Josquin Desprez” – dzieło przedwcześnie zmarłego Stanisława Moryto, wielkiego Przyjaciela zespołu, pierwszego rektora Uniwersytetu Muzycznego Fryderyka Chopina. Utwór ten ma dla nas szczególne znaczenie, bo zarejestrowaliśmy go zaraz po śmierci kompozytora, w tym samym składzie wykonawczym, z którym towarzyszyliśmy mu w ostatniej drodze w bazylice św. Krzyża w Warszawie 13 czerwca 2018 roku. Stanisław Moryto obiecał skomponować na nasz jubileusz dziękczynne „Te Deum”, ale nie zdążył wykonać tego zadania, nad czym wszyscy ubolewamy.”  Wykonawcy: Chór Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego w Warszawie Marzena Michałowska – sopran Lubomir Jarosz, Robert Filipek – trąbki Anna Baran, Mariusz Bulicz – waltornie Przemysław Bychawski, Ewa Harasimiuk – puzony Michał Sławecki – dyrygent Tracklista: 1. Mazurek Dąbrowskiego harm. Kazimierz Sikorski, opr. Władysław Raczkowski 2. Bogurodzica 3. Gaude Mater Polonia Wincenty z Kielczy, opr. Teofil Klonowski 4. Rota Feliks Nowowiejski 5. Cześć polskiej ziemi Stefan Surzyński, opr. Karol Mroszczyk 6. Warszawianka Karol Kurpiński, opr. Jerzy Zabłocki 7. Piechota / Nie noszą lampasów Leon Łusinko 8. Białe róże / Rozkwitają pąki białych róż Mieczysław Kozar-Słobódzki 9. Serce w plecaku opr. Jerzy Zabłocki 10. Matka Boża zna Warszawę Marian Sawa Sześć pieśni na chór mieszany a cappella Michał Sołtysik 11. Usque ad finem 12. Twych orlich skrzydeł 13. Kwiatek 14. Na teraz 15. Melodia 16. Hymn nowy Missa solemnis hommage à Josquin Desprez na sopran, trzygłosowy chór mieszany i sześć instrumentów dętych Stanisław Moryto 17. Introitus 18. Kyrie 19. Gloria 20. Graduale 21. Alleluia 22. Credo 23. Sanctus 24. Agnus Dei 25. Communio 26. Ite missa est  


  • Wykonawca Chór Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego , Michałowska Marzena
  • Data premiery 2019-12-05
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:  Costanzo Festa 1. Contrapunto 93 y 4 2. Contrapunto 111 y 5  Francesco Soriano 3. Alpha y 6 4. Scherza col chromatico ? 4 5. Omega y 6  Girolamo Frescobaldi 6. Canzon detta la Bernardinia 7. Canzon detta la Donatina 8. Canzon detta la Lucchesina 9. Canzon detta la Bonvisia  Francesco Magini 10. La Riviera 11. L’Albana  Ercole Pasquini 12. Durezze 13. Ricercare  Nicole Borboni 14. Solo e pensoso  Josquin des Prez 15. La Spagna  Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Francesco Rognoni 16. Pulchra es amica


  • Wykonawca InAlto
  • Data premiery 2017-11-01
  • Nośnik CD
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“Josquin is the master of notes” – This well-known quotation from Martin Luther describes how re-nowned Josquin des Préz (ca. 1450–1521) was already during his lifetime throughout Europe. Moreover, in the ensuing centuries the fascination with his work did not abate. He was the first composer who freed music from the predominant force of the cantus firmus and placed his formative genius above musical tradition. For many years the Kammerchor Josquin des Préz has successfully devoted its efforts to the musical opus of Josquin and in addition to the Missa Pange Lingua the choir presents lesserknown works on this, its debut CD.


  • Wykonawca Kammerchor Josquin Des Prez
  • Data premiery 2011-01-10
  • Nośnik CD
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The Chanson L'Homme armé has been the fundament for numerous Renaissance composers to realise aesthetic mass compositions. One of the most outstanding versions is coined by Josquin Desprez which is conclusively combined with chansons on this recording. The production received several awards in France.


  • Wykonawca Obsidienne
  • Data premiery 2012-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Album został wydany przez wytwórnię Signum Classics (SIGCD 608). Tracklista: Cristóbal de Morales 1. Jubilate Deo omnis terra Tomás Luis de Victoria 2. Missa Gaudeamus 3. Salve regina Francisco Guerrero 4. Ave virgo sanctissima 5. Surge propera, amica mea Josquin Desprez 6. Salve regina 7. Chant - Gaudeamus omnes in Domino, Salve regina


  • Wykonawca Contrapunctus
  • Data premiery 2020-01-01
  • Nośnik CD
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This new recording from The Sixteen explores the  amazing sacred music which emanated from Flanders  in the 15th and 16th centuries. This extraordinary  music spans 100 years of innovation and brilliance. Featuring arguably the three most celebrated composers  from the Franco-flemish school of the Renaissance, this  programme is centred around movements from the  staggering 12-part Missa Et ecce terraemotus by Brumel.  Josquin, Brumel and Lassus were truly European  composers, leaving their origins to work in the top  establishments of Aix-en-Provence, Ferrara, Rome and  Munich. Their music has a unique sonority which will  astound listeners - from the depth of expression and  fascinating texts of Josquin (prepare yourselves for the  surreal nature of Praeter rerum seriem) to the overtly  decorative mass movements of Brumel’s Missa Et ecce  terraemotus where the 12 parts interweave in extensive  imitation and thrilling tracery, culminating in the extraordinary  harmonic stillness of Lassus’s Timor et tremor and his  gorgeously evocative 12-part setting of Aurora lucis rutilat.  


  • Wykonawca The Sixteen
  • Data premiery 2012-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Few great composers of the past are more elusive than Josquin Des Prez. No sooner had the facts of his life and achievement been established by pioneer musicologists such as Helmuth Osthoff and Edward Lowinsky than those same facts somehow began to melt, to trickle away through our fingers. There was a time, not many years ago, when at least the outline of Josquin’s biography was felt to be secure. Now much of that biography seems far less certain, and there is a nagging suspicion that the documents which might have told us more in fact no longer exist. For how many years did Josquin live and work in France? What truth is there in the reported sighting of him at the court of Hungary? During his last fifteen years, for whom was Josquin composing? Had we been dealing with a lesser talent, those questions might have been allowed to pass. But Josquin bears the reputation of being a towering genius of his age, music’s equivalent to Leonardo da Vinci or Michelangelo. How dearly one would have liked to know more about the man, beyond what the sound of his music can tell us.The works themselves are full of problems. Again, there was a time when one could hold up a hefty pile of music and say with confidence ‘all this is by Josquin’. But the pile is dwindling: it is full of forgeries and misattributions. Even pieces that were once regarded as the epitome of Josquin have been removed. What was probably Josquin’s best-loved motet, Absalon fili mi, has recently been given instead to Pierre de La Rue. Of the works that remain firmly credited to Josquin—thankfully there are still plenty of them—virtually none can be dated precisely, and a dispiritingly small number are even loosely connected with the known facts of his life. As if the problems of biography, attribution and chronology were not enough, searching questions are now being raised even about the notion of Josquin as ‘towering genius of his age’. How did he acquire that reputation? Does he (and did he ever) merit it? At what point does the reality of Josquin turn into Josquin the myth?All this negative information serves to introduce the more positive things that can be said about the three works on this recording. First, all three seem to be quite securely by Josquin. Second, they clearly come from different periods of his life. The Vultum tuum deprecabuntur cycle is early, composed for Milan Cathedral probably during the time Josquin spent there as a singer between 1459 and 1472. Planxit autem David is a more mature work; a date nearer to 1500 has been suggested, although nothing certain is known about the circumstances of its composition. Later still—probably among Josquin’s very last works—is the Missa Pange lingua; it could easily have been written in the seven years preceding his death in 1521. Third, no one will question the exceptional craftsmanship and artistry of all three works. As long as music of this quality continues to be attached to Josquin’s name, one need have no doubts about the stature of the man.Josquin cannot have been much above the age of thirty when he wrote the motet cycle Vultum tuum deprecabuntur, and it may be a symptom of his still modest status as a singer at Milan and his relative inexperience as a composer that the work conforms so closely to established models. Like similar cycles written for Milan Cathedral by Compère, Gafurius, Gaspar van Weerbeke and others, the Vultum tuum deprecabuntur motets were intended to accompany the celebration of Mass, not as interludes but rather as a simultaneous sacred ‘concert’: in some of the Milanese cycles the various motets have actually been labelled ‘loco [= in place of the] Introitus’, ‘loco Gloria’, ‘loco Credo’, and so on. Strictly speaking, such substitution did not interfere with the liturgical act: provided that the celebrant spoke the correct liturgical texts, the choir was free to perform whatever it liked. In practice, few churches outside Milan adopted this curious practice. Although parts of Vultum tuum deprecabuntur found their way into the repertoires of other singers, there is no reason to believe that they were used in the Milanese fashion; most of the motets in the cycle address the Blessed Virgin Mary, and they could easily have been put to other devotional purposes. So scattered have the constituent parts of the cycle now become that their intended order is in some doubt. This performance follows the reconstruction by Patrick Macey, including the ‘little’ Ave Maria as the Offertory substitute and Tu lumen as the Elevation motet—neither being previously associated with the cycle.Far less is known about another of Josquin’s motet cycles, Planxit autem David. With a few minor modifications, the words are Biblical—David’s lament for Saul and Jonathan—and they have no obvious connection with the liturgy. Given the highly charged nature both of the text and Josquin’s sombre music, some sort of political allegory seems highly likely, but the work has not yet been linked with any specific event or person. Unlike the various motets in the Vultum tuum deprecabuntur cycle, which are musically independent from one another and were meant to be sung at different points in the Mass, the four movements of Planxit autem David are thematically related and must be performed one after another. Not only is the text a single continuous narrative; Josquin binds together the cycle by quoting the Gregorian reciting-tone for the Lamentations of Jeremiah in the first, third and fourth motets, each time at the words ‘How are the mighty fallen’.Plainchant also lies at the heart of the Missa Pange lingua, but in this case the foundation melody, the Corpus Christi Hymn ‘Pange lingua gloriosi’, has been so thoroughly absorbed into Josquin’s music that only the sharp-eared will be alert to its presence. Where many Masses based on chant keep the parent melody in the foreground, Josquin instead uses its contours to govern only the progress of the melodic lines, with all manner of infilling and rhythmic elaboration added to camouflage its essential shape. Possibly the appeal of the work to modern audiences—it is Josquin’s most performed Mass—lies precisely in the way its variety and unity are kept in equilibrium: for all the music’s richness of invention, everything is contained within clearly perceptible bounds of possibility. Only the very opening of the Hymn melody stubbornly retains its identity: it sets each of the five movements in motion, and sometimes recurs at major structural divisions in the text: at ‘Qui tollis peccata mundi’ in the Gloria, for example, ‘Crucifixus’ in the Credo, and at the head of all three invocations of the Agnus Dei.John Milsom © 1992


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2011-05-01
  • Nośnik CD
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