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The Red Book of Ossory | Heresy Records HERESY025

The Red Book of Ossory

£11.38

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Label: Heresy Records

Cat No: HERESY025

Barcode: 0715802313486

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Vocal/Choral

Release Date: 10th July 2020

Contents

Artists

Anakronos

Artists

Anakronos

About

‘The Red Book of Ossory’ is the debut album from Anakronos, a ground-breaking new ensemble devoted to offering compelling performances of ancient music from an original and modern perspective.

‘The Red Book of Ossory’ takes its title from the 14th-century Irish manuscript of the same name, a collection of texts that includes sixty poems by Richard de Ledrede, Bishop of Ossory, here set to medieval music from England, France, the Netherlands and Italy.

Anakronos is comprised of leading interpreters of medieval music, contemporary classical, traditional and jazz: Caitriona O’Leary, voice, Deirdre O’Leary, clarinets, Nick Roth, saxophones, and Francesco Turrisi, keyboards and percussion. Anakronos gave the first performance of The Red Book of Ossory in February 2019 to an SRO audience at the National Concert Hall in Dublin.

Fourteenth-century Ireland was a time of invasions, war, lawlessness, famine and plague. A time of fear, violence and almost unimaginable mutability. In 1317 Richard de Ledrede – an English Franciscan of the Order of Friars Minor – arrived in Kilkenny as the new Bishop of Ossory (1317- 1361) and immediately set about challenging the secular authorities and making a name for himself as a zealous moraliser and “scourge of heresy”. He was responsible for the famous witchcraft trial of Dame Alice Kyteler, composed a fantastical and nightmarish list of charges against her and others, and caused the first person in recorded history to be burned at the stake for the heresy of witchcraft: Dame Alice’s servant, Petronilla de Meath.

The Red Book of Ossory was compiled in Kilkenny in the 14th century and is housed there in St Canice’s Cathedral. Pre-eminent among the manuscript’s texts are sixty remarkable Latin verses by Bishop Richard de Ledrede, who instructed that these lyrics be sung by the priests, clerks and choristers of St Canice’s “on the important holidays and at celebrations in order that their throats and mouths, consecrated to God, may not be polluted by songs which are lewd, secular, and associated with revelry, and, since they are trained singers, let them provide themselves with suitable tunes according to what these sets of words require”.

Accordingly, Caitriona O’Leary, the singer and founder of Anakronos, has set de Ledrede’s esoteric and imagistic poetry to music from a multitude of medieval sources. O’Leary is recognized as an expert in reconstructing collections of early Irish song and has often found or speculatively reconstructed important historical texts and music. Her edition of The Wexford Carols saw the rediscovery of many of the melodies which were reunited with the texts.

Contents:
1. Anon.: Canite, canite ultu locundo
2. M Paris: Artisson's Dance
3. Jacob Senleches: Jhesu lux vera mencium
4. Anon.: Maria decoquit panem salvificum
5. Bologna: Consendit Salamon ventrale ferculum
6. Mattheus de Perusio: The Flight of Dame Alice Kyteler
7. Anon.: Regine glorie
8. Caitríona O'Leary: Ecce sacerdos magnus
9. Anon.: Amoris vinculo
10. A Lantins: Christe redemptor omnium
11. Anon.: Maria noli flere
12. Caitríona O'Leary: En Christi fit memoria
13. Anon.: Ubi iam sunt?
14. Solage: Summe Deus clemencie
15. Anon.: Da, da nobis nunc
16. Machaut: Verum est
17. Magister Franciscus: The Burning of Petronilla de Meath

Reviews

Caitríona O’Leary has a lovely, bell-like voice with clear articulation and sensitivity to the Latin text. The performances are interesting, the sound is quite attractive, and not to be dismissed – a recommendation for this enjoyable collection.  Michael Wilkinson
MusicWeb International
The power and impact of these performances are the product of the seriousness with which Catríona O’Leary and her colleagues take both the story of Ledred’s fierce treatment of his innocent victims and the spirituality of his Latin verses. […] The results […] are fascinating – the “learned disregard for chronology” paying rich dividends. There isn’t a dull or disappointing track on the disc
MusicWeb International
O’Leary has taken music from a variety of medieval sources to create the settings for Ledrede's texts, and around them Anakronos has woven a striking blend of Medieval, jazz and contemporary... Anakronos has woven the music into something seductively original, neither completely new nor completely old.
Planet Hugill

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