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Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 9:03 am
by LeTromboniste
A cool Croatian ensemble I play with every year just released a video we shot a couple years ago. One of my favourite pieces of music from the early 17th century. It's scored for 6 parts (and can be done with any mix of voices and low-ish instruments, as is done here, as all the parts are texted and within normal soprano, alto, tenor, baritone and bass ranges), but the composer specifies that it's actually conceived for soprano solo and 5 trombones!!! And he also offers the option to transpose it down further by a fifth and then do it with alto solo (in which case the bass part is in the basso profundo range with written several low A's, and two or three of the five trombones must be bass trombones). Which is just absolutely glorious.
Here it is in the normal transposition, with soprano, tenor, gamba and three trombones.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 9:17 am
by SteveM
Gorgeous performance!
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 9:59 am
by muschem
Beautiful!
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 10:20 am
by Kbiggs
Beautiful performance! The video was also beautiful, and added to, rather than distracting from, the performance.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 10:32 am
by Lhbone
Amazing. Thank you for sharing. Will there be more recordings to come? Bravissimo!
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 12:07 pm
by BEngland
Thank you for sharing! Very beautiful performance.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 02, 2026 3:30 pm
by LeTromboniste
Lhbone wrote: Tue Jun 02, 2026 10:32 am
Amazing. Thank you for sharing. Will there be more recordings to come? Bravissimo!
There are a couple others on the ensemble's YouTube channel from previous years. I don't think we recorded any videos last year, so nothing coming soon. But this fall we are recording an album!
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2026 3:05 pm
by CalgaryTbone
Beautiful as always Maximillian!
Jim Scott
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2026 3:16 pm
by hyperbolica
LeTromboniste wrote: Tue Jun 02, 2026 9:03 am
A cool Croatian ensemble I play with every year just released a video we shot a couple years ago. One of my favourite pieces of music from the early 17th century. It's scored for 6 parts (and can be done with any mix of voices and low-ish instruments, as is done here, as all the parts are texted and within normal soprano, alto, tenor, baritone and bass ranges), but the composer specifies that it's actually conceived for soprano solo and 5 trombones!!! And he also offers the option to transpose it down further by a fifth and then do it with alto solo (in which case the bass part is in the basso profundo range with written several low A's, and two or three of the five trombones must be bass trombones). Which is just absolutely glorious.
Here it is in the normal transposition, with soprano, tenor, gamba and three trombones.
Wow, I really love that sound!
It's such a highly specialized sound, yet I can only imagine that it's seriously under appreciated.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2026 4:00 pm
by harrisonreed
That sounds fantastic. The whole ensemble is fantastic as one unit, but the human voice is sublime.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2026 4:21 am
by Soulbrass
I listened, looked, and learned…and came away much better for the experience! Thank you for sharing and the background info! Beautiful!
Are all of those period instruments?
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2026 11:13 am
by Doug Elliott
Where would one get the music for that?
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2026 5:53 pm
by Posaunus
Soulbrass wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 4:21 am
Are all of those period instruments?
By period instruments, do you mean authentic instruments made in the early 17th century, or are you asking if the trombones (and portative organ) are more modern replicas built to match the designs, materials, and techniques of that time?
In any case, it's not very important to me - the sound and playing appear to be quite authentic and very tasteful. I've now listened (and watched the video) four times, and still enjoy it immensely!
Hvala ti, Maximilien!
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2026 6:10 pm
by Soulbrass
Posaunus wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 5:53 pm
Soulbrass wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 4:21 am
Are all of those period instruments?
By period instruments, do you mean authentic instruments made in the early 17th century, or are you asking if the trombones (and portative organ) are more modern replicas built to match the designs, materials, and techniques of that time?
In any case, it's not very important to me - the sound and playing appear to be quite authentic and very tasteful. I've now listened (and watched the video) four times, and still enjoy it immensely!
Hvala ti, Maximilien!
Either…just curious.
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Mon Jun 08, 2026 12:47 am
by LeTromboniste
Soulbrass wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 4:21 am
Are all of those period instruments?
The trombones are all copies of instruments made between the 1590s and 1630s.
Doug Elliott wrote: Sun Jun 07, 2026 11:13 am
Where would one get the music for that?
This piece is in Linda Pearse's
Seventeenth-century Italian Motets with Trombones at A-R Editions. I believe that editor might also have it available as a single piece than can be bought separately. I'm pretty sure the original 17th-century print is also available for free online
Re: Late Renaissance polyphony with trombones
Posted: Tue Jun 09, 2026 2:53 am
by PhilG
Wonderful sounds - thank you for sharing this, Maximilien.