Alexander Agricola: Masses
Alexander Agricola was a Netherlandish Renaissance composer who lived and worked in France, Italy and the Low Countries from the 1470s until his death in 1506. This makes him a contemporary of Josquin des Prez, though his earliest music was written under the influence of Johannes Ockeghem, who was 30-40 years older than Agricola and Josquin.
Agricola's eccentric mixture of dense polyphony, "athletic" voice parts, rhythmic virtuosity and an often playful shifting of the musical norms of the day places him in the category of musical innovators/oddballs that includes De Lasso, Gesualdo, Biber, CPE Bach, Satie & Ives. At the same time, this is music of strange beauty and obvious religious feeling, written at a time when the religious stakes in Europe were very high indeed.
It also makes for a good match with Beauty Farm, the excellent group of six male singers who have presented, on the Fra Bernardo label, so many fine albums of Netherlandish and French Renaissance music: by Ockeghem, Gombert and Obrecht, among others. Agricola's masses on this album, the Missa Malheur me bat and the Missa in myne zyn, make for two well-filled CDs of music from a little-known master.
"Malheur me bat" is a three-part rondeau by an unknown composer; it's an example of the Phrygian mode, one of the eight church modes, which is known for its emotional character. Agricola was not the only composer to make use of this source material; there are works by Obrecht, Ockeghem and Josquin based on the same rondeau tune. But it's clear that Agricola has made a very personal work out of this common source.
Missa in myne zyn, Agricola's final mass, is based on a popular Dutch tune. I know this work from the 2010 recording on Ricecar with Capilla Flamenca under Dirk Snellings, which is also a wonderful recording. But Beauty Farm brings out a touch more character and individuality in their version, There's no holding back in the weird, and weirdly beautiful, Agnus Dei III.
There are many gaps in our knowledge of Agricola. We don't have a clear idea of when all of his major works were written, or even where he was in Europe at any given time. But the music on this disc speaks so eloquently we have a vivid facsimile of what kind of person he was. That's a tribute to both the artistry and the scholarship of Beauty Farm.
The wonderful cover image is by Muntean/Rosenblum, the collaborative artist duo of Markus Muntean and Adi Rosenblum. See more of their artwork here.
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