On 03/26/2011 08:34 PM, Edward Mast wrote:
Whoops, meant to say 1566, not 1599.  And well, perhaps I Fagiolini was trying 
to outdo Mahler's 8th ('Symphony of a Thousand').   Given the opportunity, I'd 
like to hear it (Striggio) live with voices only.
On Mar 26, 2011, at 5:54 PM, Monica Hall wrote:

Well - their translation is a bit wide of the mark.  Spem in alium nunquam
habui praeter in te, Deus Israel" means " My hope is in none other than
thee, O God of Israel" not  "Hope in any other".

The mass has been performed before but not recorded I think.   The main
attrction is that it is in 40 parts.   I rather doubt whether there were
lots of lutes taking part in the 16th century.  Wishful thinking.   No cloud 
machines either.   Where do they get these ideas from?

Monica


----- Original Message ----- From: "Edward Mast"<[email protected]>
To: "Lute List"<[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, March 26, 2011 9:16 PM
Subject: [LUTE] Striggio 40 part mass from 1599


Perhaps it's been discussed here - the Striggio 40 part mass -  though I
haven't seen it.  For a look at how it was recently uncovered and
recorded, see:  http://tinyurl.com/4d9rthp

There are also some youTube videos of it being performed/recorded showing
many lutenists among the band.



There's also Ockeghem's 36-part canon Deo Gratias.

--
Elliott Chapin
http://clients.teksavvy.com/~echapin



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