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John Taverner (1490 - 1545)
The Western Wynde Mass
The Sixteen Choir
Harry Christophers - conductor
The Western Wynde is perhaps the best-known of all Taverner's masses, partly for the ingenuity and clarity of its structure, but also more especially for its tunefulness. Moreover, it was evidently admired in its own day, since the younger composers Tye and Sheppard, probably in emulation, based masses on the same theme. The melody on which Taverner based his mass is of unknown provenance. It is clearly a secular tune which enjoyed some popularity but which does not occur in any of the few surviving sources of the early sixteenth century. There is a song whose text begins 'Westron wynde when wyll thow blow' in a manuscript in the British Library, and although its tune bears some similarities to Taverner's, these might easily be no more than the common stylistic mannerisms of the period.
The Western Wynde may be the earliest mass composed in England to be based on a secular melody, although the practice had been common on the continent since the time of Dufay. The use of popular tunes in sacred music was advocated by Luther, and this, coupled with some internal stylistic factors, has led to the suggestion that the Mass belongs to Taverner's Oxford years when he came into contact with advocates of the 'new learning'. On the other hand, part of the Agnus Dei occurs in keyboard format in a manuscript which may date from as early as 1520, and which seems to have some association with Court circles. If the Mass does date from early in Taverner's career, its progressive style and originality of design are even more remarkable.
The melody occurs nine times in each of the four movements (the Sanctus-Benedictus being a formal entity). Heard first in the top voice it subsequently moves to the contratenor or bass, while broadly similar changes of scoring and metre occur in each movement. The result is one of the most closely unified of all English cyclic masses.
01. O Splendor Gloriae, motet for 5 voices
02. Te Deum Laudamus, motet for 5 voices
03. Alleluia, Veni Electa Mea, motet for 4 voices
Western Wynde Mass for 4 voices
04. Gloria
05. Credo
06. Sanctus
07. Benedictus
08. Agnus Dei
Total Time: 56'02

