Requiem (Missa pro Defunctis), for 3-4 voices (introit, Kyrie, gradual, offertory only)
Missa Pro Defunctis, requiem for 4 voices
The two settings of the Catholic requiem mass recorded here are the earliest polyphonic versions to survive; an earlier version by Dufay was lost. Both masses are appropriately somber. There is some question about the authenticity and completeness of Ockeghem's Requiem, described in the annotations for this Dutch release, but most of the music is unmistakably Ockeghem's, with fearsomely independent lines with spiky rhythmic diminutions appearing out of nowhere, considerable contrapuntal complexity in spots, and a certain ...
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The two settings of the Catholic requiem mass recorded here are the earliest polyphonic versions to survive; an earlier version by Dufay was lost. Both masses are appropriately somber. There is some question about the authenticity and completeness of Ockeghem's Requiem, described in the annotations for this Dutch release, but most of the music is unmistakably Ockeghem's, with fearsomely independent lines with spiky rhythmic diminutions appearing out of nowhere, considerable contrapuntal complexity in spots, and a certain stark quality. It uses the paraphrase technique, borrowing melodies from requiem chants and expanding on them in a polyphonic texture. The Requiem by Pierre de la Rue, a generation younger, is a good deal more regular, with points of imitation and an orderly addition and subtraction of voices generally. Parts of it are written in a very low register, and both this and the sinewy counterpoint of Ockeghem's mass are nicely brought out by the performance of the Dutch group Cappella...
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