There is certainly no lack of interest in the Eton Choirbook 
    among vocal ensembles. A considerable number of recordings have been devoted 
    to this important collection of sacred music from the English renaissance. 
    This is the second disc by the Choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. The 
    first volume was reviewed 
here. 
    
      
    The Eton Choirbook was put together around 1500 and originally comprised 94 
    pieces by the then leading composers in England. 64 of these compositions 
    have survived complete. One of the incomplete works is 
O Maria plena gracia 
    by Walter Lambe. A complete performance as on this disc is possible because 
    the same piece is included in another source of the same period, the 
Lambeth 
    Choirbook. It is also the longest piece in the whole collection. Apart 
    from its length it is notable for various reasons. Lambe is the only composer 
    of the renaissance who set this text. It is not written in poetry, as was 
    common, but in prose, and is in the first person singular. It is divided into 
    a number of sections which differ in scoring. The sections for full choir 
    are largely syllabic; melismatic passages are included in the episodes for 
    a smaller number of voices. 
      
    The differentiation in the number of voices is one way in which composers 
    of this time singled out parts of the text. In his setting of 
Salve Regina 
    Robert Wylkynson mostly reduces the number of voices, but all nine of them 
    participate in three passages: "O clemens" (O merciful one), "O pia" (O pitying 
    one) and the closing phrase: "O dulcis Maria, salve" (O sweet Mary, hail). 
    The scoring for nine voices is not unusual in this collection: there are various 
    pieces for a relatively large number of voices. These include the opening 
    motet, 
O Maria salvatoris mater which is for eight voices - not for 
    double choir, to avoid any misunderstanding. There is a strong contrast with 
    the next piece, 
Ave Maria, mater Dei by William Cornysh, which is for 
    four voices - without trebles - and which is also the shortest piece in the 
    Eton Choirbook. 
      
    The composers included here all belong to those who are well represented in 
    the collection. John Browne is present with ten works, Davy with nine, Lambe 
    with eight, Wylkynson with seven and Cornysh with five. Browne may have been 
    associated with Eton College when he was a treble; later he may have gone 
    to New College in Oxford. He is generally considered the main composer in 
    the period between Dunstaple and Taverner. Little is known about Davy, apart 
    from the fact that he was a scholar and 
informator choristarum (instructor 
    of the choristers) at Magdalen College in his early years. He has become best-known 
    for composing the first Passion setting in England which is also included 
    in the Eton Choirbook, but is incomplete. 
      
    Walter Lambe was probably born in Salisbury and was for some time scholar 
    at Eton College. Later he worked at St George's Chapel, Windsor. Wylkynson 
    was active at Eton College as a singing clerk and as 
informator choristarum. 
    Cornysh was closely connected to the court. He was a Gentleman of the Chapel 
    Royal and became Master of the Children of the Chapel Royal in 1509. He has 
    become best-known for his secular partsongs in the vernacular, such as 
A 
    robyn, gentyl robyn and 
Woffully araid. 
      
    Despite the differences between the pieces of the programme, described by 
    Timothy Symons in the booklet, there is also a strong degree of coherence: 
    all the pieces are connected to the virgin Mary who was especially venerated 
    at Eton College. The college was dedicated to the Assumption of the Blessed 
    Virgin. There was a 
Salve ceremony every day, at which the sixteen 
    choristers amd their master would perform an antiphon in her honour. 
      
    The reference to the number of singers involved brings us to matters of performance 
    practice. The list of singers in this recording includes 32, exactly twice 
    the number Symons mentions in his liner-notes. The number of trebles is fourteen, 
    almost as many as the whole number of choristers in the time the Eton Choirbook 
    was put together. This is probably due to their way of singing. The sound 
    of the trebles is sweet and soft-edged, and seems to reflect more the 'angelic' 
    ideal of the Victorian era than the way trebles used to sing earlier in history. 
    In recent decades various British choirs of boys and men have adopted a different 
    approach in which the training of the boy's voice leads to a stronger sound, 
    which is sometimes called 'continental'. Examples are the choirs of New College 
    Oxford and St John's College Cambridge. The effect could be that fewer singers 
    are needed and as a result that transparency is greater. 
      
    The size of the choir also affects the delivery. It is true that in this repertoire 
    the text is not central. However, this should not mean that the listener can 
    hardly understand a word. That is exactly the case here as soon as the full 
    choir sings. When you have lost track of the progress of a piece it is hard 
    to find out where the singers are, even with the lyrics in front of you. In 
    passages for a reduced number of voices the text is much better audible which 
    only confirms my view that a smaller choir would have been preferable. It 
    should be added that in those passages the vibrato of some of the lower voices 
    is clearly noticeable. This is definitely not apt in this kind of repertoire. 
    
      
    The last issue concerns the text of the first motet, 
O Maria salvatoris 
    mater by Browne. According to the booklet the text "shows signs of having 
    been written by someone (Browne himself?) with an imperfect understanding 
    of poetic structure." Several examples are mentioned. It has been decided 
    to correct these 'imperfections'. I find this decision incomprehensible. For 
    me it is a matter of principle not to correct a composer. It is different 
    when the music is known from a copy by someone else, and the copyist has made 
    a clear error. However, the Eton Choirbook was carefully put together and 
    it is highly unlikely that imperfections would not have been corrected if 
    they were considered a problem. Apparently that was not the case. Modern performers 
    should reconcile themselves to this situation. 
      
    The Choir of Christ Church Cathedral is an excellent ensemble, no doubt about 
    that. The singing here is admirable, and I certainly don't want to give the 
    impression that this disc is not good. It is. However, it could have been 
    better with a different approach in regard to the size of the choir and the 
    style of singing of, in particular, the trebles. Fairly recently I reviewed 
    a disc with motets from the Eton Choirbook by the Huelgas Ensemble (
review). 
    The approach to this repertoire is quite different and I found the results 
    convincing. With its 15 voices the ensemble is sufficient to interpret the 
    music from the Eton Choirbook. 
      
    
Johan van Veen 
    http://www.musica-dei-donum.org 
    https://twitter.com/johanvanveen 
      
    Good but could have been better.