GUILLAUME DUFAY The Masses for 1453
GCD P31907
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Cantica SymphoniaGiuseppe Maletto, direction
Laura Fabris, soprano Alena Dantcheva, soprano Francesca Cassinari, soprano Gianluca Ferrarini, tenor Giuseppe Maletto, tenor Massimo Altieri, tenorMarco Scavazza, baritone
Guido Magnano, organ Marta Graziolino, harp Svetlana Fomina, fiddle Efix Puleo, fiddle Mauro Morini, slide trumpet & sackbut David Yacus, slide trumpet & sackbut
Production details
Total playing time 80:17 Recorded in Roletto, Italy, in July 2011 and July 2013 Engineered by Davide Ficco Produced by Giuseppe MalettoBooklet essay by Anne Walters Robertson
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Commercial release sheet (PDF)
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Missa Se la face ay pale 01 Kyrie 02 Gloria 03 Credo 04 Sanctus05 Agnus Dei
Missa L’Homme armé 06 Kyrie 07 Gloria 08 Credo 09 Sanctus 10 Agnus Dei
About this CD
Crammed onto one new disc from Cantica Symphonia on Glossa are two of Guillaume Dufay’s most important polyphonic works brought alongside each other for the first time on CD: the Missa Se la face ay pale and the Missa L’Homme armé. The two masses were amongst the first in history to use popular songs for their cantus firmus: Dufay’s own chanson for the first mass and the anonymous popular tune – “The Armed Man” – for the second.
The year 1453 was an extraordinary one in Western Christendom with the Fall of Constantinople following on the acquisition by Louis, Duke of Savoy of what is now known as the Shroud of Turin. As renowned scholar Anne Walters Robertson describes in her incisive scene-setting analysis for the booklet, these two events provided the backdrop for Dufay – newly recalled by the Duke to the Court of Savoy – to compose these remarkable commemorative masses.
As is the case with its general interpretative outlook, Cantica Symphonia opt for performances which embrace the use of instruments such as slide trumpets, sackbuts, fiddles and the organ alongside vocal forces. Director Giuseppe Maletto and organist Guido Magnano discuss their reasons for such instrumental involvement in the CD booklet. This is the fourth recording of music by Guillaume Dufay – to add to two volumes devoted to motets and one to chansons – from Cantica Symphonia on the Glossa label, and it resumes the Italian ensemble’s remarkable coverage of 15th-century treasures.