Given that the music of Arvo Pärt is among a vanishingly small group
by whom it is possible to follow a clear line back to ‘early’ music, The
Tallis Scholars are, on paper, the best group imaginable to record his
music. Peter Phillips has disagreed in the past with the idea that there
is a direct link between the two – it is certainly the case that the
stasis that underpins Pärt’s harmony creates a kind of timelessness that
is less, not more, in need of historical context – but either way, the
purity of The Tallis Scholars’ sound provides the perfect scaffolding
for the pieces on this disc. Not least because the bell-like,
note-clustering Tintinnabuli music of Pärt (illustrated here in its most
basic form in the Magnificat) is there specifically to address the issue of perception, time and history.
The argument about whether Pärt is a composer affected by context or
simply creating music out of a vacuum continues, but in many ways its
calm equilibrium is an engaging mystery that could only be considered
regressive if viewed in its dimmest light. And in their performance
(immaculate as always, apart from a very few issues – largely at the top
of the texture – with vowel sounds and clarity of words), The Tallis
Scholars have presented their chosen repertoire in the way they have
always done best – as a sound world of profound beauty. (Caroline Gill / Gramophone)
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