Missa pro defunctis contains:
01. Requiem aeternam
02. Kyrie
03. Si ambulem
04. Domine Jesu Christe
05. Sanctus & Benedictus
06. Agnus Dei
07. Lux aeterna
Source: | booklet of cd CRD Records CRD 5008 |
♫ 01. Requiem aeternam
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♫ 02. Kyrie
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♫ 03. Si ambulem
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♫ 04. Domine Jesu
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♫ 05. Sanctus
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♫ 06. Agnus Dei
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♫ 07. Lux aeterna
© CRD Records CRD 5008
Du Caurroy's Missa pro defunctis for 5 voices mixed, is an extremely famous piece, and was performed at all the funerals for French kings for nearly two hundred years, earning it the apocryphal title "Mass for the funerals of the Kings of France."
Du Caurroy's work, which omits the sequence but includes settings of the gradual and its psalm verse (Psalm xxii.4), was sung at the funeral of Henri IV in 1610, and adopted thereafter for the obsequies of all French kings until 1774.
Early in the 17th century the Renaissance polyphonic style, in various modified forms, served for several decades as a principal medium for requiem composition. A fine example, in Palestrinian style, is G.F. Anerio's setting (published in 1614, and reprinted three times up to 1677), the introit of which reveals an elegant use of chant paraphrase. Similar in approach, but with more archaic cantus firmus treatment, are the expressive settings of two of Victoria's successors, Duarte Lobo (Officium defunctorum, 1603) and J.P. Pujol (requiem for four voices, before 1626). An important innovation, evident in a number of works, is the inclusion of an organ continuo part (with figured or unfigured bass), which allowed greater variations in texture and dynamics. Early examples include Aichinger's requiem (1615; D-As) and settings, from 1619, by Antonio Brunelli and Jean de Bournonville. In France, finely moulded part-writing, close in style to that of Lassus, is found in requiem settings by Eustache Du Caurroy (1606, ed. in Le pupitre, lxv, 1983) and Etienne Moulinié (1636, ed. D. Launay, Paris, 1952).
Du Caurroy's work, which omits the sequence but includes settings of the gradual and its psalm verse (Psalm xxii.4), was sung at the funeral of Henri IV in 1610, and adopted thereafter for the obsequies of all French kings until 1774.
Author: | Steven Chang-Lin Yu |