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Thomas Tallis: Complete Works
Tallis;Du Roi;Benson-Wilson;Dixon
Thomas Tallis: Complete Works
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #4
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #5
  •  Track Listings (33) - Disc #6
  •  Track Listings (16) - Disc #7
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #8
  •  Track Listings (23) - Disc #9
  •  Track Listings (4) - Disc #10


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Tallis;Du Roi;Benson-Wilson;Dixon
Title: Thomas Tallis: Complete Works
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Brilliant Classics
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 4/1/2008
Album Type: Box set
Genre: Classical
Styles: Opera & Classical Vocal, Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830), Early Music, Sacred & Religious
Number of Discs: 10
SwapaCD Credits: 10
UPCs: 842977036121, 5028421936123

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CD Reviews

Another Superb Set from Brilliant Classics
M. Morrison | 05/30/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I can't praise highly enough the service to the music world that Brilliant Classics is doing by issuing the complete works of both well-known and lesser-known masters. Brilliant is perhaps best known for its complete sets of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, each priced at a little over $100 for close to 100 CDs in each set.



I was previously familiar with the English Thomas Tallis (1505-1585), but not with the complete spectrum of his works, which is available in this set. Most of the works are Catholic Latin choral works, highly suggestive of the sublime master of sacred polyphony, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1514-1594), Tallis's Italian contemporary.



Palestrina remained completely Catholic, and wrote only for the Church. Tallis, as an Englishman, was caught up in that revolutionary period, when Henry VIII and his successors began introducing modified Church services in the early part of that period known as the Protestant Reformation. CD6 contains some of the music for these services, some in Latin and some in English. (English just doesn't cut it as a liturgical language; it always comes across as trite in comparison to the Latin.)



Some of Tallis's Latin settings almost equal the great Palestrina, such as "Spem in alium" for forty individual voices, which is perhaps the most familiar of Tallis's works. CD9 and CD10 contain Tallis's instrumental music, primarily on lute and harmonium, with some vocal airs.



The engineering is clear, as with all the Brilliant Classics sets, which are not reissues of older material, but new recordings. The 10-CD set is supplemented by a CD-ROM containing all linernotes and text of the vocal music.



"
An excellent set
Sid Nuncius | London England | 05/14/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is a truly excellent set, and at a bargain price. I have loved Tallis's music for many years and have some dearly loved recordings by The Tallis Scholars, the Hillard Ensemble and The Taverner Consort which won't be superseded by this set, but are certainly beautifully complemented by it. The approach of Alistair Dixon and Chapelle du Roi is calm and restrained, and the music glows as a result. The singers are very good, tuning is virtually faultless and the absence or restrained use of vibrato ideal. The overall sound is very warm, by and large, emphasised by resonant acoustics in all the recording venues, and this eight-year project is a very fine achievement which does real justice to one of England's greatest composers.



The music itself is magnificent. Obviously, in any Complete Works there will be some pieces of less interest to individual listeners, and while I'm not over-keen to hear lengthy organ settings of Felix namque on a regular basis, there will be those who are. There is a wealth of magnificent music - for example the motet Miserere nostri is, for me, two minutes of what Heaven sounds like and, of course, there are little-recorded gems to discover among the better-known pieces. A Complete Works also allows you to see how the changing religious politics of the Tudor period affected the way liturgical music was composed, from the overwhelmong, stunning 40-voice motet Spem in alium for Catholic worship under Mary to the spare but lovely Four Voice Mass to comply with Cranmer's new protestantism.



It's worth saying that Disc 9 - The Instrumental Music and Songs - was named by a recent reviewer on BBC Radio 3's CD Review as an Essential Tallis disc. Quite right, too, in my view - the playing by Charivari Agréable is excellent and the counter-tenor Stephen Taylor is very good, too. The disc also includes `Ye sacred muses', Byrd's stunning lament on Tallis's death, which is a real bonus.



Brilliant Classics make a pretty good job of the packaging. It's cardboard, but attractive and durable. All the original liner notes and texts are supplied on a CD-ROM as Adobe Acrobat files. It's good to have them, although you can't really sit down comfortably with the text in front of you as you could with a booklet. For so much superb music at such a price, though, this is a sacrifice well worth making.



This set is not only musically delightful, it is an outstanding bargain, and I recommend it wholeheartedly."
Good, but some shortcomings
Mr. Carl G. Tuckwell | Sydney, Australia | 02/14/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)

"It's good to have Tallis's complete works in one package. I really enjoyed the performances except for the few countertenor passages and I feel the harpsichordist could've used an instrument with 2 manuals and used a mute stop for the Left Hand, which is too strong (as recorded) especially in "Lesson: Two Parts in One" (tr.14 on CD9).



The tomes of notes on the accompanying CD ROM take some wading through to find the best educated guesses for when the various works were written, and the pro-Papal anti-Protestant bias of the main writer is a bit hard to take.



The biggest disappointment is the fact that on CD1, tracks 9 & 10 are incorrectly split/allocated. The printed sleeve is actually correct, showing the "Agnus Dei" [last part] of the Mass: "Salve Intemerata" as lasting 3:56.

When one attempts to 'rip' one's CD onto one's hard-drive however, this "Agnus Dei" (tr.9) is shown as lasting for 15:55 (and does run for that long).



The proof that this is wrong, is that the biggest gap of silence is at 3:56, after which you can hear the singers sing "Salve intemerata".

("Salve Intemerata" is a stand-alone choral work [separate from the Mass of the same name], which is tr.10 on CD1.)



I've tried to split track 9 where it should end using my Xitel "Inport Deluxe" ripping software, but my system is not letting me save it. This is quite a nuisance.



I've found other problems with this "Brilliant - Classics" label before (not the original label of the recordings), so it is a label I will avoid from now on.



The music is sublime (most of it for my taste anyway), and 90% of the performances are excellent.



The problems mentioned above are quite disappointing for the outlay and wait for overseas mailing."