Polyphonies oubliées - Faux bourdons Ensemble Gilles Binchois & Dominique Vellard

Album info

Album-Release:
2014

HRA-Release:
26.11.2014

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Ave consurgens aurora (versus)02:28
  • 2Lumen ad revelationem (antienne) - Nunc dimittis (cantique de Siméon)04:28
  • 3Credo in unum Deum07:48
  • 4Mater regis angelorum (versus)01:17
  • 5Nunc dimittis - Ayn apolis - Magnum nomen Domini (cantique de Siméon)05:19
  • 6Litaniæ B. Mariae Virginis (Litanies)02:28
  • 7Miserere, psaume 5003:14
  • 8Creator omnium (versus)03:01
  • 9Magnificat du 6e ton07:21
  • 10Laudate pueri (psaume 112)03:55
  • 11Ave regina cœlorum (antienne)02:04
  • 12In exitu Israel (psaume 113)05:19
  • 13Laudate Dominum du 3e ton (psaume 116)02:04
  • 14De profundis (psaume 129)04:23
  • 15Pange lingua (hymne)03:47
  • 16Dixit Dominus (psaume 109)03:43
  • 17Ave maris stella (hymne)02:24
  • 18Alleluia, O filii et filiæ03:41
  • 19Ave maris stella (hymne)02:21
  • 20Kyrie de la Messe des morts03:13
  • 21Dies iræ (séquence)08:55
  • 22Omne quod dat mihi (antienne) - Magnificat du 7e ton05:24
  • 23Kyrie de la messe des solennels mineurs03:55
  • 24Ave verum corpus (séquence)02:31
  • 25Ut queant laxis (hymne)03:49
  • 26Inviolata (séquence)02:23
  • 27Adoremus in æternum (antienne)06:01
  • Total Runtime01:47:16

Info for Polyphonies oubliées - Faux bourdons

From the Middle Ages until the nineteenth century, and even in some cases until the time of the Second Vatican Council, plainchant was sung polyphonically all over Europe, in a great variety of ways. It is no exaggeration to say that for centuries it epitomised the sound of church music for congregations. Fauxbourdon was a means of solemnising the Divine Office by embellishing the plainchant melody.


In order to revive this music it was necessary, in particular, to measure the importance of the part played by orality in the practice of fauxbourdon – the written sources that have come down to us being inadequate – and then to attempt to re-acquire the original practice in order to bring out the charms and beauties of these pieces.


The solution adopted by Dominique Vellard was to work with the same group of singers throughout the duration of the project, thus enabling the acquisition of the collective reflexes that would make it possible to grasp the specificity of fauxbourdon.



This double album is the result of four years’ work – four years, during which several thousand manuscript and printed examples were identified. The selection presented here reflects the variety and diversity of four centuries of French polyphonic plainchant.

Ensemble Gilles Binchois
Dominique Vellard, conductor
Maîtrise de Toulouse
Mark Opstad, conductor


Ensemble Gilles Binchois
Since 1979 Dominique Vellard has been the inspirational driving force behind the Ensemble Gilles Binchois : more than 35 years of research and performance that have led to the creation of some of the essential recordings, especially of music from the medieval and Renaissance periods. An outstanding catalogue of recordings devoted to the music of Machaut, the Notre-Dame School, the Burgundian repertoire, early french polyphony or the spanish Renaissance, on labels such as Virgin Classics, Harmonic Records, Ambroisie, Deutsche Harmonia Mundi, Glossa y Aparté, have met public, critical and musicological acclaim. The Ensemble Gilles Binchois performs regularly mostrly across Europe, but also in Morocco, India, Malaysia USA and South America.

Dominique Vellard’s passion for music from plainchant to the 17th century was nurtured in his childhood at the Maîtrise de Notre-Dame in Versailles and these repertoires remained present in his personal career as in that of the Ensemble. In a parallel to the medieval rmusic which made his fame, the Ensemble did not stop singing early baroque music – and later one – by investing mainly religious repertoires: Schütz, Buxtehude, Bach, Monteverdi, Gesualdo, Carissimi, Charpentier, Nivers, Boely, until Liszt and Fauré…

If the leading role which Dominique Vellard held in the emergence and the growth of the “French school” of medieval music – in particular for the totally new way in performing the Gregorian chant – gave him an image of medievalist, his interest for the other periods of the early music is unwavering. Alternating these repertoires going from the 10th to the 19th c. is for the group a way of freshening permanently the enthusiasm, of revitalizing the artistic impetus of its members, of avoiding setting too much fixed performances.

In its “variable-geometry” functioning, the Ensemble works regularly with some fifteen artists and integrates over time young singers and instrumentalists, mainly formed at the Schola Cantorum of Basel. This openness offers to these young artists a professional stepping stone and brings to the ensemble new colours and a renewed spring of energy.

Its interest for the Church music brought the group to perform unknown repertoires, contributing to introduce them to the public, in close collaboration with the musicologists Marie-Noël Colette, Wulf Arlt and Jean-Yves Hameline; among these rediscovered and recreated repertoires can be mentioned the Tropes, the 11th c. french polyphonies, the 12th c. “Nova cantica”, the “Banquet of the Vow” -15th c., the Manuscript of Le Puy, 12th-16thc., the french “Fauxbourdon” of the 16th to the 19thc.

The group is annually the privileged guest of the “Rencontres de Musique Médiévale du Thoronet”, created 25 years ago and has established, in connection with this festival, a summer academy, the 9th session of which will take place in July 2015.

Since about fifteen years, thanks to Dominique Vellard’s passion for the musics of other traditions, the group developed projects with musicians of northern and southern India, Spain, Brittany, Morocco or Iran. In the field of the contemporary creation, Dominique Vellard dedicates a part of his time to the composition, drawing from his own musical and spiritual background as from his interest for the monodies and polyphonies of oral tradition.

Professor during several years at the CNSM of Lyon, Dominique Vellard formed number of French performer in the medieval repertoires. Since 1982, he is professor at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis where students of the whole world come to follow his classes and where several generations of musicians drew the constituent elements of their style and the foundation of their knowledge.

Dominique Vellard recorded more than 50 albums of which about forty at the head of the Ensemble Gilles Binchois.

Dominique Vellard
The major areas explored by Dominique Vellard in his musical carreer are rooted in his childhood experiences -as a choirboy at Notre-Dame de Versailles- that gave rise to his passionate love of Gregorian chant, Renaissance polyphony, french composers of the seventeenth century and Bach organ music and chorales.

Soon after completing his studies at the Versailles conservatory, Dominique Vellard decided to concentrate his work on medieval and Renaissance repertoires, fields in which he felt he was entirely free to express his musical aesthetics.

Alongside his “medieval carrer”, Dominique Vellard has kept up his involvement in other repertoires, exploring the fruitful possibilities of encounters between the earliest works in his repertoire and traditions as varied as North and south Indian Classic repertories, Breton Guerz and Spanish traditions.

Dominique Vellard has made more than forty recordings, whether as soloist, conductor, or at the head of the Ensemble Gilles Binchois, which he has directed since 1979.

He has taught at the Schola Cantorum in Basel since 1982. He is also the Artistic director of the festival “Les Rencontres Internationales de Musique Médiévale du Thoronet”.

As a composer, he writes regularly, since 1999, for the Ensemble Gilles Binchois and for friends, mostly vocal music : A first CD of his vocal music “Vox nostra resonet” is edited by the record company GLOSSA.

This album contains no booklet.

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