Opinions will vary over
                      this set: some may call it a good way to acquire a wide
                      mix of medieval music quickly; others may call it an attempt
                      by Naxos to shift some samples of its less popular repertoire
                      and capitalise shamelessly on a famous name. You decide.
                  
                   
                  
                  
Everything in this collection
                      has been previously released by Naxos in various different
                      guises. They have been gathered together here under the
                      most tenuous auspices imaginable! There is virtually no
                      direct link to the Templars 
whatsoever here! The
                      booklet notes don’t even claim one! Instead each CD has
                      a brief historical blurb about the Templar order: beginning,
                      growth and decline. Once this - non-musical - introduction
                      has been put out of the way, they give a very brief, generalised
                      discussion of the music with no texts or translations,
                      by the way. This never attempts to link it directly to
                      the Order, merely suggesting that if a Templar was alive
                      in the Middle Ages then this is the sort of thing that
                      he just might have heard. All this makes the whole Templar
                      conceit rather ridiculous! It would probably have been
                      more honest - if less catchy - if Naxos simply to market
                      this set for what it is: an endearing collection of a broad
                      range of medieval music, both sacred and secular. On those
                      terms it is actually very attractive indeed.
                   
                  
Variety is the key to
                      the first disc. There is both sacred and secular music
                      on offer here, from poignant Crusader songs (tracks 1 to
                      3), rumbustious settings of 
Carmina Burana and anonymous
                      laments, through to the visionary, ecstatic settings of
                      the famous Hildegard of Bingen. Everything on this disc
                      is very well done: the exposed instrumental playing is
                      very fine, with caring attention to the historical detail
                      of the instruments themselves. Similarly the singing in
                      the sacred moments is effectively sonorous and evocative.
                      Equal credit goes to the engineers here for capturing such
                      a convincing church acoustic. There are some nice surprises
                      here, such as the 
Cantigas by King Alfonso The Wise
                      of Castile.
                   
                  
Disc 2 consists completely
                      of Gregorian Chant, which presumably a Templar would have
                      heard while he was in church?. I’m no expert in this kind
                      of music and there’s an element in which it all sounds
                      the same; though it’s worth saying that in many cases that
                      is exactly the point. It is sung very clearly and accurately
                      by the Nuova Schola Gregoriana, however, and again the
                      church acoustic is very evocative and convincing.
                   
                  
The third disc is the
                      most revelatory, though here the Templar connection is
                      the most distant of all. It presents music from different
                      traditions and courts that surrounded the Mediterranean
                      around the times of the Crusades. Western European elements
                      are represented by some vividly sung choruses (tracks 1
                      to 3) which represent secular concerns such as love, the
                      awakening of Spring and drinking. Similarly there are sacred
                      manuscripts from Florence and Germany. The most interesting
                      music on this disc, however, is the contrasting music that
                      was coming out of the contemporary Levant. The Syrian Dinaresade
                      is a surprisingly hypnotic piece whose purpose was to draw
                      the listener into the music as a way of meditating and
                      transcending his environment. The Croatian and Arab elements
                      show a mingling of the traditions of East and West, while
                      the works of Yunus Emre show how the Turks were responding
                      to their own mystical traditions. 
                   
                  
All of the music on this
                      set is well performed and the presentation box is attractive.
                      Don’t buy this set if you want to find out about the musical
                      traditions of the Templars, however, because it will get
                      you almost nowhere. If, on the other hand, you’d like to
                      dip into medieval music and sample a very wide variety
                      at very little cost then this set is as good a place as
                      any to make a start.
                   
                  
                  
Simon Thompson
                  
                  see also reviews by Gary
                  Higginson and Brian Wilson 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Full Track-List                  
                  CD 1 – Music for a Knight [65:34]
                  
1. Walther von der Vogelweide (1170-1230)
                  Palastinalied
                      [03:07]
                  
2. Richard I “Coeur de Lion” (1157-1199)
                  Ja
                      nuls homs pris [2:22]
                  
3. Blondel de Nesle (1180–1200)
                  A
                      l'entrant d'este que li tens s'agence [4:07]
                  
4. Alfonso X (EL Sabio) (1221-1284)
                  Cantiga
                      No. 60, "Entre Av'e Eva" [2:19]
                  
5. Anonymous
                  Chominciamento
                      di gioia: Saltarello No. 1 [2:35]
                  
6. Anonymous
                  Carmina
                      Burana: Clauso Cronos [3:38]
                  
7. Alfonso X (EL Sabio) (1221-1284)
                  Cantiga
                      No. 213, " Quen serve Santa Maria" [5:42]
                  
8. Anonymous
                  Carmina
                      Burana: Axe Phebus aureo [5:48]
                  
9. Anonymous
                  Carmina
                      Burana: Katerine collaudemus [3:28]
                  
10. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179)
                  O
                      pastor animarum [1:23]
                  
11. Raimbaut de Vaqueiras (1150–1207)
                  Kalenda
                      maya [2:24]
                  
12. Anonymous
                  Kyrie
                      eleison (Ambrosian Chant) [1:33]
                  
13. Perotin (1180-1225)
                  Viderunt
                      omnes: Notum fecit [3:55]
                  
14. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179)
                  Kyrie
                      eleison [4:27]
                  
15. Anonymous
                  Vetus
                      abit littera [2:23]
                  
16. Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179)
                  Alleluia,
                      O virga mediatrix [3:33]
                  
17. Anonymous
                  Estampie
                      [2:34]
                  
18. Anonymous
                  Lamento
                      di Tristano: La Rotta [4:30]
                  
19. Anonymous
                  A
                      la nana [3:11]
                  
20. Anonymous
                  Guardame
                      las vacas [2:16]
                  
Estampie
                      (1-3, 11, 17); Ensemble Unicorn (4-7, 18); Oni Wytars Ensemble
                      (8, 9); Oxford Camerata/Jeremy Summerly (10, 14, 16); Manuela
                      Schenale (soprano) (12); Tonus Peregrinus (13, 15); Carmen
                      Cano (mezzo), Ensemble Accentus/Thomas Winner (19); Shirley
                      Rumsey (lute) (20)
                   
                  
CD 2 – Music of the Church (All anonymous
                          Gregorian Chant) [75:25]
                  
Introitus
                  1.
                      Adorate Deum [4:02]
                  
2.
                      Da pacem [4:33]
                  
3.
                      Dominus illumination mea [5:45]
                  
4.
                      Laetetur cor [4:46]
                  
Gradualia
                  5.
                      Dirigatur [3:09]
                  
6.
                      Domine, Dominus noster [3:22]
                  
7.
                      Iacta cogitatum tuum [3:54]
                  
8.
                      Laetatus sum [3:14]
                  
Versus Alleluiatiei
                  9.
                      Adorabo [2:17]
                  
10.
                      De profundis [3:16]
                  
11.
                      Deus, iudex iustus [2:51]
                  
12.
                      Laudate deum [1:49]
                  
Offertorio
                  13.
                      De Profundis [3:16]
                  
14.
                      Domine convertere [2:17]
                  
15.
                      Iubilate Deo universa terra [7:45]
                  
16.
                      Iustitiae Domini [4:15]
                  
Communiones
                  17.
                      Circuibo [2:04]
                  
18.
                      Dicit Dominus [3:51]
                  
19.
                      Dominus firmamentum meum [2:23]
                  
20.
                      Qui manducat [2:17]
                  
21.
                      Gustate et videte [3:29]
                  
Nuova
                      Schola Gregoriana/Alberto Turco
                   
                  
CD 3 – Music of the Mediterranean [67:24]
                  
1. Anonymous
                  Bach,
                      bene venies [5:58]
                  
2. Anonymous
                  Tempus
                      transit gelidum [5:07]
                  
3. Anonymous
                  Tempus
                      est iocundum [5:58]
                  
4. Traditional Syrian
                  Dinaresade
                      [13:50]
                  
5. Traditional Macedonian
                  Nevestinko
                      oro [3:17]
                  
6. Anonymous German
                  Sei
                      willekommen Herre Christ [4:38]
                  
7. Traditional Croatian
                  Kod
                      Bethlehema [1:43]
                  
8. Traditional Croatian
                  Koleda
                      na Bozic [1:02]
                  
9. Traditional Turkish
                  Dudul
                      [2:38]
                  
10. Christian-Arabic Tradition
                  Kyrie
                      Eleison [3:17]
                  
11. Christian-Arabic Tradition
                  De
                      la crudel morto de Cristo [1:59]
                  
12. Yunus Emre (1241-1308)
                  Sallalahu
                      ala Muhammed [4:41]
                  
13. Yunus Emre (1241-1308)
                  Pesrev
                      [1:28]
                  
14. Yunus Emre (1241-1308)
                  Ey,
                      Dervisler [4:57]
                  
15. Traditional Jewish
                  Keh
                      Moshe [1:46]
                  
16. Adam de la Halle (c.1245–c.1288)
                  Robin
                      m’aime [3:01]
                  
17. Adam de la Halle (c.1245–c.1288)
                  Mout
                      me fu grief li departir [1:26]
                  
Ensemble
                      Oni Wytars (1-5, 7-9, 15); Ensemble Unicorn (6); Tonus
                      Peregrinus (10-14, 16, 17)