| David Allinson and The Renaissance Singers at Holy Sepulchre London, |
The Renaissance Singers is a chamber choir with a difference. One of London’s leading non-professional vocal groups, for over 80 years it has specialised in original programmes of early vocal music that include overlooked masterpieces and many first modern performances.
Their new CD, made possible by their supporters on Crowdfunder, is of a Requiem by Sebastián de Vivanco that has not been recorded before.
The choir’s Musical Director David Allinson tells us more.
Imagine this. You’ve taken your seat in the concert hall for a performance of a Requiem: Verdi perhaps, Brahms, or maybe Fauré. But the conductor turns to the audience with an announcement. Apparently, this piece exists in different versions, and it’s unclear which of them the composer wanted us to hear. The musicians will therefore perform parts of the work twice.
If this scenario seems unlikely to you, it shows that you tend to think of most composers’ works as being fixed, made stable by a set of published musical symbols. We assume the music represents the composer's final thoughts at whatever point the clock was stopped – and usually within the composer’s lifetime.
In Renaissance music this isn’t always the case. The printing press did revolutionize the dissemination of vocal music throughout the period, and we are fortunate to have printed collections by many great composers. But much of what was sung in cathedrals then was transmitted in manuscript copies. It was the use and re-use of the music, not its written structures, that mattered: music would be adapted, rewritten or discarded in different locations to suit the particular circumstances of the institution and the choir. And sadly these manuscripts were easily damaged, lost or deliberately discarded.
For musicians today the result can be a blur, a musicological puzzle. How might we fit together the ‘work’ from the sources available? Should we even try to second-guess the composer’s intentions, or should we embrace the instability of multiple, open-ended solutions?
This explains how my choir, The Renaissance Singers, came to perform and record some movements of a Requiem twice.
Rediscovering a Requiem by a great composer






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