This is a fascinating and highly successful project. Without 
                  going into the kind of detail which the booklet notes give us, 
                  this is Johannes Ockeghem´s Missa pro defunctis, 
                  integrated with newly composed movements by Bengt Sørensen 
                  to create what is, if not an entirely new piece, certainly a 
                  very new and fresh way of connecting the new in the old, with 
                  the old in the new. This is an extension of Paul Hillier’s 
                  more frequent combining of contemporary with early music in 
                  his programming, and here he has brought in Bengt Sørensen 
                  to complete ‘the bits which are missing’ in Ockeghem’s 
                  work. 
                    
                  Ockeghem’s Missa is full of moments which can wrong-foot 
                  you into thinking that you are hearing something contemporary. 
                  Harmonic shifts and quasi-romantic melodic lines abound, and 
                  just listen to some of those startling female-only passages 
                  in the Kyrie. The Graduale flows from Sørensen’s 
                  Lacrimosa as if from the same fearlessly expressive source, 
                  and there are moments in the Offertorium which are truly 
                  overwhelming. 
                    
                  Sørensen’s contributions are idiomatically sensitive 
                  and integrate by way of atmosphere, but are by no means a soft-pedalled 
                  imitation of ancient style. The opening Responsorium 
                  has plenty of reassuring parallel intervals and open harmonies, 
                  but immediately alerts the ear to what is to come, with close 
                  harmonies and strange dissonances which have inner resolution, 
                  but no ultimate cadence. The central Recordare Jesu pie 
                  in the Sequentia is one of those impossibly melting creations 
                  which make your hairs stand up with some kind of prehensile 
                  spiritual angst. Separated by plainchant, the first two minutes 
                  of the following Lacrimosa is truly beautiful: a moment 
                  of suspended time where the tears fall, but never reach the 
                  ground. There are moments of restrained drama here and in the 
                  Benedictus, where vibrato is used as a textural effect, 
                  making the air itself ring like a Tibetan bowl. The entire Requiem 
                  cycle closes with Sørensen’s In Paradisum, 
                  is the most extensive and in some ways the most far reaching, 
                  as the booklet notes describe, “with cluster-like chordal 
                  effects that are thinned out, recondensed and break like waves 
                  against each other.” 
                    
                  All of the texts are printed in the booklet in Latin, English 
                  and Danish, revealing a contribution from Dylan Thomas in the 
                  Responsorium: Memento mei Deus: “Hourly I sigh,/for 
                  all things are leaf-like/and cloud-like. Flowerly I die/for 
                  all things are grief-like/and shroud-like.” There is a 
                  diagram at the back of the booklet which shows the position 
                  of singers and microphones, with a more conventional choir setting 
                  for the Ockeghem, and singers all around the venue for Sørensen’s 
                  work. In stereo this effect is not so very noticeable, though 
                  there are enough added dimensions and everything remains perfectly 
                  balanced. With a surround set-up the effect is quite magical. 
                  I searched high and low for the name of the church where this 
                  was recorded, but even un-named this is a perfect acoustic for 
                  such unaccompanied vocal scoring. This is one of those recordings 
                  for which you close your eyes and give yourself entirely over 
                  to a very rich musical experience indeed. Paul Hillier’s 
                  Ars Nova Copenhagen is a remarkable collection of vocalists 
                  for which this work is tailor-made, and the music is brought 
                  to life in a way which shoots straight into the soul and lingers 
                  long in the mind. 
                    
                  Dominy Clements