I'm not an expert but oratorio didn't come into vogue until the 1700s. The 1600s saw opera come into its own. Don't think you'll find an animal called a Renaissance oratorio. Renaissance composers stuck to motets and masses for sacred pieces.
For things sung 'sequentially at a season' it sounds as though the Gradualia of Wllm. Byrd could be what you are looking for. The Gradualia is a setting of the propers polyphonically for the liturgical year. There are similar collections by others.
I was briefly in a choir for a Low Mass during Advent the year before last. These songs aren't grouped together like what you're asking for, but the polyphony we sang was:
Veritas Mea by George Malcolm (my personal favorite) Ave Verum Corpus by Giacomo Carissimi Veni Veni Emmanuel arranged by Jason Phillips Dixit Maria by Hans Leo Hassler Ave Maria by Tomas Luis de Victoria Magnificat Sexti Toni by Orlando di Lasso
then of course we did Advent chants like Creator Alme Siderum and En Clara Vox Redarguit.
I thought it was pretty top-notch stuff. You might like one or two of them. I dunno.
EDIT: missed that you were asking for stuff in English. That I do not have.
Any of the Byrd settings of the gradual are nice, here are some for Christmas:
Introit- Puer Natus --- http://www1.cpdl.org/wiki/images/sheet/byrd-pu5.pdf
Gradual- Viderunt Omnes --- http://www1.cpdl.org/wiki/images/8/85/BYRD-VI1.pdf
Alleluia - Dies Santificatus --- http://www1.cpdl.org/wiki/images/d/de/BYRD-DIE.pdf
Offertory - Tui Sunt Coeli --- http://www1.cpdl.org/wiki/images/0/01/BYRD-TUI.pdf
Communion - Viderunt Omnes --- http://www1.cpdl.org/wiki/images/0/00/BYRD-VI2.pdf
Viderunt Omnes (communion) is the shortest and easiest if you are short on rehearsal time
Wow, Erik, thank you, that may come in handy for me as well. However from glossing over Puer Natus, I must say that I've never seen a tenor part that went quite so high (and written in treble clef, no less), nor an alto part that went quite so low! Have you done these before? Did you make modifications?
What about Handel's Messiah? It's long, but it's in English :)
How about I Wonder as I Wander? Do you have a solost who can hack this part? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qor0Me9zE0&feature=related
Check Oxford University Press catalogues. A good resource might be "Advent for Choirs" from OUP.
Check the seasonal categories at CPDL. These can serve as good "spring-boards" for other ideas.
Check the works of Gerald Near, Ned Rorem, Richard Proulx, Leo Nestor, Peter Latona; also the Saint Louis
Cathedral Choral series from Morningstar Music, etc. Good Luck in your search!
Ralph, I think "Gaudete" was collectively dissed in another thread last year. I remember not chiming in but thinking that it is regarded as a "Revels" kind of work. I would think "Riu, riu..." falls into that category as well- suited for the minstrels in the courtyard, not the schola in the chapel.
Kathy, a chorister-composer from Baltimore I met one Sunday in my parish, Douglas Kingsley, has a very lovely, modest setting of the "O magnum..." published by OCP/Trinitas. Worth checking out.
We've managed the Victoria once. I'd give my little toes up if we could do the Poulenc setting!
I have some other polyphonic motets in the library I'll check on Monday.
Dixit Maria, FWIW, is most appropriate 4th Advent, oui?
There are some stunning modern works that could be defended as "children" of polyphony:
John Payntner's "The Rose"
David Conte's "A Stable Lamp is Lighted"
Alf Houkem's "The Rune of Hospitality"
etc.
If there are no Renaissance oratorios, there are cycles of office music, including some for Christmas: I'm thinking of Lassus' Responsories from Isaiah and I'm sure there are others. If you're putting together a prelude/concert a mass setting like Tallis' 7-part Puer nobis might fit the bill nicely. For English you're a bit early, though you might be able to piece together non-liturgical items.
What about something from the Oxford Book of carols? What about Sweelinck's
Hodie Christus natus est? Fairly difficult, but I know there's an English translation underneath the Latin
Sorry, I know that's not what you are looking for. It just came to mind after a glass or two of wine with dinner LOL
Donna
For good English choral music, you will need to look to the Anglican tradition mentioned above.
The Holy Boy by John Ireland A Spotless Rose by Herbert Howells Lullaby my Jesus, Bethlehem Down both by Warlock The Blessed Son of God by Vaughan Williams
Here is the Little Door by Howells, (and the other one which goes with spotless rose- Sing Lullaby?) Other composers have set 'Here is the Little Door'- Randall Thompson for one. We could all go on for hours listing our favorite English Christmas motets or anthems.
I love John Ireland, and Eric Thiman, and Michael Head. And Roger Quilter, etc etc etc.
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