Formats and Editions
1. Ego Sum Panis Vivus
2. Fratres Ego Enim Accepi
3. Accepit Jesus Calicem
4. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Kyrie
5. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Gloria
6. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Credo
7. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Sanctus
8. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Benedictus
9. Missa Fratres Ego Enim Accepi: Agnus Dei
10. Caro Mea Vere Est Cibus
11. Pater Noster
12. Sacerdotes Domini
13. Song Of Songs No. 25: Quam Pulchri Sunt Gressus Tui
14. Song Of Songs No. 26: Duo Ubera Tua
15. Song Of Songs No. 27: Quam Pulchra Es
16. Victimae Paschali Laudes
17. Pange Lingua
More Info:
Palestrina had a vast impact on the development of music. Hugely famous in his day, his reputation and influence grew even more following his death and his work can be seen as a summation of Renaissance polyphony. His musical legacy is prodigious even by the standards of the time-he wrote over 100 masses-and he was the first Renaissance composer to have a complete edition of almost his whole output published in modern notation. The eighth recording in The Sixteen's celebrated series focuses on the Last Supper and the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross at the first Easter and includes the Missa Fratres ego enim accepi. Three settings from the Song of Songs also feature.