Catalogue

April 9th, 2010

HAVPCD161 – Pentecôte à Pontigny


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HAVPCD161 - Pentecôte à Pontigny Music in honour of three Archbishops of Canterbury
Disk Title Pentecôte à Pontigny
Music in honour of three Archbishops of Canterbury
Choir Schola Gregoriana of Cambridge
Conductor Mary Berry
Location The Abbey Church, Pontigny, Yonne.
Date Recorded October 1992
Audio Tracks 21

The Abbey of Pontigny, second daughter-house of Cîteaux, was founded in 1114 in the valley of the River Serin, a typical rural Cistercian site. The Abbey church is the largest Cistercian church surviving in France today. The imposing height and length of the building give it a remarkably warm and resonant acoustic, well suited to chant. The brilliance of the white stone enables the purity and simplicity of the early Cistercian architecture to be revealed in all its beauty.

Trk. Duration Track Title Composer
1 02:54 Veni, creator Spiritus
2 04:22 Spiritus Domini
3 01:26 In Rama sonat gemitus
4 06:35 Clangat tuba, martyr Thoma
5 01:38 Jacet granum
6 03:08 Clangat pastor in tuba cornea
7 02:22 Thomas gemma/Thomas cæsus
8 02:34 Iste Confessor
9 02:16 Veni, sancte Spiritus
10 02:45 Veni, sancte Spiritus John Dunstable
11 04:12 Jam Christus dator munerum F-M. Charlet
12 03:38 Exivit ab Anglia
13 01:27 Ave, gemma confessorum
14 01:57 Adoramus te, Christe
15 02:36 Alleluia: hic Edmundus
16 02:52 Dum complerentur Johannes Nucius
17 01:17 Anima mea liquefacta est
18 02:49 Filiæ Jerusalem
19 03:23 Ave, mundi rosa
20 03:15 Salve Regina
21 05:40 Te Deum laudamus

The Abbey is rich in history. In particular, during the 12th and 13th centuries three English Archbishops of Canterbury sought refuge there: Thomas Becket (1118-1170), Stephen Langton (d.1228), and Edmund of Abingdon (c.1175-1240), who became patron saint of Pontigny. Pentecost has a special meaning for the people of Pontigny because it was on a Whit Monday that Edmund of Abingdon – St-Edme in French – was transported from Soissy, where he died, to his final resting-place above the high altar in the Abbey church. This recording enters into the spirit of ‘Pentecôte à Pontigny’: ritual music for the feast of Pentecost, chants gleaned from Cistercian service-books, and a selection of pieces that honour the three Archbishops.

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