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            "title": [
                "Vivaldi, A. RV 608 Nisi Dominu"
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            "artist": [
                "Antonio Vivaldi"
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            "album": [
                "Sacred Music, Volume 6"
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            "comment": [
                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)"
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                30
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                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)\r\nSacred Music, Volume 6\r\n\r\nSusan Gritton, soprano\r\nNathalie Stutzmann, contralto\r\nHilary Summers, contralto\r\nAlexandra Gibson, contralto\r\n\r\nThe King's Consort\r\nChoir of the King's Consort\r\nRobert King, conductor\r\n\r\nHyperion CDA66809\r\nRec. 2000 [DDD]\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nBeatus Vir, RV795  [26:17]\r\n\r\n     I. Beatus vir (Allegro)\r\n    II. Gloria et divitiae (Allegro)\r\n   III. Beatus vir\r\n    IV. Exortum est in tenebris (Andante molto)\r\n     V. Beatus vir\r\n    VI. Jucundus homo (Allegro)\r\n   VII. Beatus vir\r\n  VIII. In memoria aeterna (Andante molto)\r\n    IX. Beatus vir\r\n     X. Paratum cor ejus (Andante)\r\n    XI. Beatus vir\r\n   XII. Dispersit, dedit pauperibus (Andante)\r\n  XIII. Beatus vir\r\n   XIV. Peccator videbit (Largo)\r\n    XV. Gloria Patri, et Filio (Allegro)\r\n\r\nSalve Regina, RV617  [10:12]\r\n\r\n     I. Salve Regina (Andante)\r\n    II. Ad te clamamus (Allegro\r\n   III. Eia ergo (Allegro)\r\n    IV. Et Jesum (Andante)\r\n\r\nLaudate Dominum, RV606  [1:59]\r\n\r\nIn exitu Israel, RV604  [3:38]\r\n\r\nNisi Dominus, RV608  [20:37]\r\n\r\n     I. Nisi Dominus (Allegro)\r\n    II. Vanum est vobis (Largo) [-]\r\n   III. Surgite (Presto - Adagio)\r\n    IV. Cum dederit (Andante)\r\n     V. Sicut sagittae (Allegro)\r\n    VI. Beatus vir (Andante)\r\n   VII. Gloria (Larghetto)\r\n  VIII. Sicut erat in principio (Allegro) [-]\r\n    IX. Amen (Allegro)\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nBefore the 1920s, the suggestion that Vivaldi had composed a \r\nsignificant corpus of sacred vocal music would have seemed absurd. \r\nAlmost no church music by him was known to have survived and, since \r\nhe had never been maestro di capella at any church, it was difficult \r\nto conceive of circumstances in which he would have been asked to \r\nprovide such music in bulk. True he was a priest, and for that \r\nreason would have been familiar with the sacred repertoire and, one \r\nsupposes, sympathetic to its aesthetic, but that in itself proves \r\nnothing. After all, several clerics among composers, Tartini being \r\nthe most pertinent example, eschewed vocal music altogether. The \r\nsituation changed only when Vivaldi's own huge working collection of \r\nmanuscripts came to light and was acquired for the National Library \r\nin Turin. It then became evident that his production of church music \r\nwas substantial - over fifty works have survived, and the existence \r\nof many more is recorded and that this music was varied, ambitious \r\nin form and expression, and on an artistic level at least equal to \r\nthat of his concertos. \r\n\r\nRaised as a violinist, Vivaldi probably wrote little or no church \r\nmusic until the second decade of the eighteenth century. But his \r\ntravels with his father as a 'jobbing' player often placed him in \r\nsituations where commissions for sacred works might have occurred. \r\nSuch was the probable origin of the earliest sacred work by him on \r\nwhich a date can be set, the Stabat Mater, RV621 ('RV' numbers refer \r\nto the standard modern catalogue of Vivaldi's works by Peter Ryom). \r\nVivaldi had visited Brescia in 1711 to play in the patronal festival \r\nof the Philippine church, Santa Maria della Pace; among the \r\ncompositions acquired by this church in the following year and \r\nlisted in its account book we find the Stabat Mater for alto and \r\nstrings, commissioned for the Feast of the Seven Sorrows of the \r\nBlessed Virgin, which in 1712 fell on 18 March. \r\n\r\nIn 1713 an event of the greatest importance for Vivaldi's career \r\noccurred. Francesco Gasparini, who was choirmaster at the Piet\u00e0, the \r\nVenetian charitable institution for foundlings where Vivaldi worked \r\nas a violin master and orchestral director, went on a leave from \r\nwhich he never returned. Until as late as 1719 the Piet\u00e0 failed to \r\nreplace him, which meant that Vivaldi (together with a colleague, \r\nthe singing teacher Pietro Scarpari) found himself invited to take \r\nover the main task of the maestro di coro: to supply the singers of \r\nthe institution with a steady stream of new compositions which would \r\nattract a well-heeled congregation to the chapel services and so \r\nencourage donations and bequests. For reasons of decorum, mixed \r\nchurch choirs were not acceptable in Catholic Europe at this time, \r\nand since the Piet\u00e0's male wards left the institution during \r\nadolescence to take up apprenticeships, it had no option but to \r\ntrain and use exclusively female residents as musicians. Remarkably, \r\nthe choir was laid out exactly as a normal male choir, with tenors \r\nand basses in addition to the expected sopranos and altos. The tenor \r\nparts, which have rather high compasses, were certainly sung as \r\nwritten; the bass parts were probably also sung much of the time at \r\nnotated pitch by a handful of women with exceptionally deep voices. \r\nIn case of difficulty, the bass parts could he transposed up an \r\noctave without damage to the harmony, since they were nearly always \r\ndoubled by instruments. Solo parts, however, were overwhelmingly for \r\nhigh voices: soprano or alto. More than the choir, the orchestra or \r\neven the composers of the music, these soloists were the 'star \r\nattraction' of music-making at the Piet\u00e0 - their names recorded for \r\nposterity in the letters and memoirs of visitors to its chapel. The \r\ntriumphant solismo of the contemporary opera houses could hardly \r\nfail to spill over into the sacred domain. \r\n\r\nLittle of Vivaldi's church music composed during this period \r\n(1713-1719) circulated in Italy outside the Piet\u00e0's walls, but some \r\nworks reached the Habsburg domains in central Europe. A visitor from \r\nBohemia, Balthasar Knapp, acquired a number before his return to \r\nPrague in 1717, and his collection appears to have been the nucleus \r\nof a modest Vivaldi cult which flourished in such centres as Prague. \r\nOsek (in north Bohemia), Brno (in Moravia) and even Breslau (in \r\nSilesia). Vivaldi's sacred works were also known in the capital of \r\nSaxony, Dresden, where the Bohemian composer Jan Dismas Zelenka took \r\na few pieces into his extensive collection of church music. \r\n\r\nThe surviving works from this 'first' period account for just under \r\nhalf of the total. A similar number date from a 'middle' period \r\nstretching from the mid-1720s to the early 1730s. These include \r\nnearly all the compositions laid out for two ensembles (in due cori, \r\nas Vivaldi describes this form of setting). Whereas the earlier \r\nworks are restrained in expression and generally quite simple in \r\ntexture, this second group is characterized by flamboyance and \r\ncontrapuntal ostentation. Many of these works appear to have a \r\nconnection with the Feast of St Lawrence Martyr on 10 August; \r\nVivaldi may have written them for the convent church of San Lorenzo \r\nin Venice (which every year celebrated its patronal festival with \r\ngreat pomp, commissioning music for Mass and Vespers from external \r\ncomposers), or perhaps for the church of San Lorenzo in Damaso, \r\nwhose protector was his Roman patron, Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni. What \r\nis certain is that these works were composed for male voices - the \r\nenergetic writing for the bass voices in such works as the Dixit \r\nDominus, RV594, would be unthinkable for a female singer. \r\n\r\nNear the end of his career, in 1739, Vivaldi once again supplied \r\nsacred vocal compositions to the Piet\u00e0 during an interregnum between \r\nchoirmasters - this time for payment, since he was no longer its \r\nemployee. Only three of the works, apparently written for Easter \r\nSunday, are extant today. They exemplify very clearly Vivaldi's \r\nturn, in his last years, to the fashionable galant style cultivated \r\nby younger Neapolitan composers, among them Vinci, Leo and Porpora. \r\n\r\nA clear majority of the surviving works are for solo voice or \r\nvoices. These include all the motets, introduzioni (an introduzioni \r\nis a special kind of motet designed to precede the setting of a \r\nPsalm or a section of the Mass), hymns and votive antiphons, besides \r\na few of the Psalms themselves. The remaining works are either - in \r\nthe language of the time - pieno (for choir only) or concertato (for \r\nchoir with one or more soloists). The supporting orchestra is most \r\noften made up merely of strings and continuo, but several of the \r\ncompositions include wind instruments or obbligato parts. The \r\nvitality and idiomatic quality of the instrumental writing in these \r\nworks is unrivalled in Italian sacred vocal music of the period. \r\n\r\nA clear distinction must be made between the works on liturgical \r\ntexts - texts which are unalterable and have their appointed place \r\nin the church calendar - and those on freely invented poetic texts \r\n(motets and introduzioni). The former mostly employ forms either \r\npeculiar to church music (for example, the so-called 'church aria' \r\nresembling the outer section of a da capo aria) or freely derived \r\nfrom instrumental music, while the latter follow secular models in \r\ntheir adoption of recitative and the da capo aria. A very few \r\nmovements in the 'liturgical' works observe the stile antico based \r\n(at some remove, and not without modification) on the polyphonic \r\nlanguage of sixteenth-century vocal music. Vivaldi seems to have had \r\ngreat difficulty in reproducing this style, since the specimens \r\ncontained in his works include several instances of plagiarism. \r\n\r\nThe greatness of Vivaldi's sacred vocal music resides not in its \r\nhistorical influence, for it seems not to have circulated very \r\nwidely in his day and (unlike his concertos) not to have initiated \r\nany practice copied by other composers, but rather in its consummate \r\nartistry and high level of inspiration. If Vivaldi does not quite \r\nhave the musical gifts of a Bach, a Handel or even a Pergolesi, he \r\nhas a manner of expression which is entirely individual and \r\nunmistakable, even in his least substantial works. In his best \r\nmovements one discerns an almost shocking radicalism: a willingness \r\nto strip music down to its core and reconstitute it from these \r\nsimplest elements. There is also a powerful instinct for thematic \r\nintegration at work; time and again, analysis reveals how the same \r\nsimple ideas inform each movement of a composite work and impart \r\nunity to it. The often unexpectedly subtle word-painting testifies \r\nto the thoughtfulness which Vivaldi brought to these compositions. \r\nThey can accurately be described as the bridge between his \r\nimagination as a musician and his conviction as a priest: the point \r\non which all facets of his complex personality converged. \r\n\r\n\r\nBEATUS VIR, RV795\r\n(Susan Gritton, soprano; Nathalie Stutzmann, Hilary Summers & \r\nAlexandra Gibson, contraltos)\r\n\r\nThis setting, closely related to the well-known setting of the same \r\npsalm for double choir, RV597 (the 'reversed' RV number is wholly \r\nfortuitous), was recognised as a composition of Vivaldi less than \r\ntwenty years ago when fragments of it were discovered in the library \r\nof the Conservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. Its \r\nposition in the part-books containing it established clearly that it \r\nbelonged to the group of psalms bought from Vivaldi by the Piet\u00e0 \r\nshortly before Easter 1739 and probably performed on that occasion. \r\nRemarkably, the surviving parts matched perfectly those of a work \r\nsurviving in a non-autograph score in the S\u00e4chsische \r\nLandesbibliothek in Dresden. There was one complication: in Dresden \r\nthe work was attributed to Baldassarre Galuppi (1706-1785), the \r\nleading Venetian composer of the first generation after Vivaldi. \r\n\r\nThe concordances in Venice and Turin, as well as the totally \r\nVivaldian style of the work, would probably have sufficed by \r\nthemselves to confirm the Dresden score of RV795 as authentic in all \r\nrespects. However, added support comes from the fact that the \r\nmanuscript was prepared by the Venetian music-copying firm of Iseppo \r\nBaldan, notorious among musicologists (especially Haydn scholars) \r\nfor the exceptionally large number of deliberately misattributed \r\nworks among its products. Baldan's copying shop supplied the Dresden \r\ncourt, in the decades immediately following Vivaldi's death in 1741, \r\nwith large quantities of sacred vocal works by Galuppi: one can \r\neasily imagine that this Beatus vir, whose autograph manuscript it \r\nhad perhaps acquired from the composer's estate via Vivaldi's \r\nnephews (who were themselves professional copyists with links to \r\nBaldan), was 'slipped in' under the younger composer's name to make \r\nup the numbers. \r\n\r\nClose examination shows that RV597 and RV795 go back to a common \r\narchetype, a setting of the Beatus vir for single choir and \r\norchestra that Vivaldi probably wrote during the 1710s. RV597, \r\nprepared in the 1720s, is an adaptation for male voices in which the \r\nensemble is expanded to include a second choir and orchestra. RV795 \r\nretains the single ensemble, replaces selected movements by others \r\nwritten in a galant style, and casts aside the solo bass in favour \r\nof a 'pseudo bass' singing in the alto register. The last-mentioned \r\nchange is most evident in the terzet 'In memoria aeterna', where the \r\nsecond contralto doubles the instrumental bass an octave above, \r\nproducing a novel style of part-writing. The tenor required in the \r\nsame terzet and in the 'Peccator videbit' movement was presumably \r\nAmbrosina (born c.1710), famous for her deep voice. \r\n\r\nThe differences between RV597 and RV795 mirror those between the \r\nmiddle (RV610) and late (RV611) versions of the Magnificat. Baldan's \r\ncopyist probably worked directly from the composer's autograph \r\nmanuscript, in which the second movement (similar to the one found \r\nin RV597 but not including the repetitions of phrases assigned to \r\nthe second coro) had evidently not been deleted or removed when its \r\nintended replacement was inserted. Consequently, the Dresden source \r\ninnocently transmits two separate versions of the 'Gloriae et \r\ndivitiae' movement: one going back to the lost archetype and the \r\nother dating from the late 1730s. \r\n\r\nBecause of the stylistic gap between old and new elements, RV795 \r\noffers a fascinating glimpse of evolving musical practice at the \r\nPiet\u00e0 and of its ageing composer's attempts to keep his style \r\nup-to-date. \r\n\r\n\r\nSALVE REGINA RV617\r\n(Susan Gritton, soprano)\r\n\r\nVivaldi left three surviving settings of this Marian antiphon. Two \r\nare for solo alto and instruments laid out in two cori dating from \r\nthe 1720s at earliest. Unexpectedly, the third setting, a much \r\nearlier work for soprano and strings in F major, survives only in a \r\nnon-autograph manuscript preserved in the Moravian Museum in Brno, \r\nCzech Republic. It may have travelled to Bohemia in 1717 together \r\nwith a group of manuscripts of sacred works by Vivaldi collected by \r\nBalthasar Knapp, secretary to Count Kinsky. \r\n\r\nA highly unusual feature of the work in Brno is the scoring of its \r\nopening movement, in which the accompaniment consists of solo violin \r\nand continuo alone. There is a universal convention in Baroque music \r\nthat the outer movements of a multi-movement work should be fully \r\nscored: it is in the inner movements that the texture can be \r\nlightened or varied. Only in RV617 does one find Vivaldi departing \r\nfrom this principle in a sacred vocal work. If there is a \r\nhermeneutic reason underlying his choice, it may be a desire to make \r\nthe solo violin stand for Mary herself, to whom the soprano \r\naddresses his or her prayer. In the second movement, 'Ad te \r\nclamamus', the string tutti enters. The third movement, 'Eia ergo', \r\nbrings soloist and tutti together in a rich, concerto-like texture. \r\nThe final movement, 'Et Jesum', is a rocking siciliana in which the \r\ntutti and the solo violin accompany by turns. Without question, this \r\nis one of Vivaldi's most original sacred vocal compositions, and one \r\nin which his experience as a composer of concertos is most apparent. \r\n\r\n\r\nLAUDATE DOMINUM RV606\r\n(Choir)\r\n\r\nVivaldi wrote this concise but powerful single-movement setting of \r\nPsalm 116 (117 in Protestant bibles) for choir and strings in his \r\n'first' period at the Piet\u00e0. Having only two verses, plus the \r\nmandatory Lesser Doxology, the psalm could hardly have been treated \r\notherwise (it is the psalms with around ten verses that make the \r\nbest candidates for multi-movement treatment). Vivaldi concentrates \r\nmelodic and rhythmic interest in the part for unison violins, \r\ntreating the choir as a kind of 'texted continuo'. This violin part \r\nis based on a short, arching motive that in some shape or form \r\nreappears once or twice in literally every bar. Half-way through, \r\nthe composer produces a masterstroke, illustrating the word \r\n'misericordia' (mercy) with a surging progression in sustained notes \r\nthat takes the music momentarily into the distant region of B flat \r\nminor (the home key is D minor). \r\n\r\n\r\nIN EXITU ISRAEL RV604\r\n(Choir)\r\n\r\nWith its twenty-seven verses (not including the two comprising the \r\nLesser Doxology), Psalm 113 (Psalms 114 and 115 combined in \r\nProtestant bibles) has always proved a handful for composers. In \r\nopting to set it for choir alone in a single, continuously running \r\nmovement, Vivaldi took a very rational decision, even if, in his \r\nhaste to complete the movement, he managed to confuse verse 4 with \r\nverse 6, thereby accidentally skipping a couple of verses. \r\n\r\nRV604 belongs to the group of psalms Vivaldi wrote for Easter Sunday \r\nat the Piet\u00e0 in 1739. It survives not only in Turin but also in the \r\nfragments of the Piet\u00e0's repertory today preserved at the \r\nConservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. It is \r\namusing to see, from the parts copied out for their own use by the \r\nPiet\u00e0's musicians, that they had just as much difficulty as we \r\nsometimes have today in deciphering Vivaldi's intentions. \r\n\r\nThe composer does his best to keep the musical interest alive in \r\nthis 97-bar movement. He varies the accompanimental patterns on the \r\nviolins, changes key in effective and sometimes surprising ways, and \r\nutilises different kinds of vocal texture (albeit without ever \r\nforegoing a pervasive homophony). Imitating the structure of the \r\npsalm's verses, he sometimes adopts a responsorial style in which \r\nthe solo sopranos alone are answered by the full choir. \r\nWord-painting is rarely encountered. Because of its deliberate \r\nsimplicity, this setting shows few differences from the comparable \r\npiena settings from the 'first' period, RV606 and 607. which were \r\ncomposed over twenty years earlier. \r\n\r\n\r\nNISI DOMINUS RV608\r\n(Nathalie Stutzmann, contralto)\r\n\r\nRV608 is Vivaldi's most extended and artistically ambitious psalm \r\nsetting for solo voice to have survived. It certainly dates from his \r\n'first' period, but no one has yet established whether or not it was \r\nwritten for the Piet\u00e0. It survives in Turin not as an autograph \r\nscore but as a set of parts copied out by the composer himself, his \r\nfather and other hands. This suggests that its original, or perhaps \r\nits eventual, destination lay outside the Piet\u00e0's walls. It was \r\nVivaldi's father who copied out the obbligato viola d'amore part for \r\nthe 'Gloria'. In its notated form, this part treats three of the \r\nfour upper strings as transposing 'instruments' - the open strings \r\nof the viola d'amore are tuned to D, F and D instead of the E, D and \r\nG familiar to a violinist - a procedure that leads to bizarre visual \r\neffects. Fingered as they would be on the violin, however, the notes \r\nmake perfect harmonic and melodic sense. \r\n\r\nIt has long been known that the Piet\u00e0 produced excellent players of \r\nthe six-stringed viola d'amore. Among them were the celebrated Anna \r\nMaria (1696-1782), for whom Vivaldi composed two viola d'amore \r\nconcertos, and her successor as principal violinist, Chiaretta \r\n(1718-1796). Only recently did the first testimony to Vivaldi \r\nhimself as a virtuoso of that instrument turn up: in 1717, en route \r\nfrom Bologna to Venice, he celebrated a stopover in the small city \r\nof Cento) with an impromptu performance on the viola d'amore in a \r\nlocal church, which was packed so full that the overspilling \r\nlisteners had to jostle for space outside in the road. So the \r\nintended soloist in the Nisi Dominus could well have been the \r\ncomposer himself. \r\n\r\nThe nine movements are as varied in style and scoring as one could \r\nimagine. Two ('Vanum est vobis' and 'Beatus vir') are simple \r\ncontinuo arias, while one ('Sicut sagittae') has a string \r\naccompaniment in unison with the voice, and two others ('Nisi \r\nDominus', with its abridged and retexted reprise 'Sicut erat in \r\nprincipio') are church arias in a lively concerto style. 'Cum \r\ndederit' conveys drowsiness by being set in a slow siciliana style \r\nand employing a distinctive motive with chromatically ascending \r\nlines that the composer often introduces in association with the \r\nidea of sleep (as in the second solo episode in the first movement \r\nof his 'Spring' Concerto, RV269); for this movement leaden mutes \r\n(piombi) are prescribed. \r\n\r\nThe most original movement is the third ('Surgite'), which is cast \r\nas an accompanied recitative, counterposing rapid ascending figures \r\nexpressing the act of standing up to slow, reflective passages for \r\nthe 'bread of sorrows'. The final 'Amen' imitates the style of an \r\n'Alleluia' in a motet. But the spiritual fulcrum of the Nisi Dominus \r\nlies in the 'Gloria', which instead of being the usual expression of \r\nsimple joy, is a brooding, dark-hued movement full of solitude. \r\n\r\nt- Michael Talbot \u00a92000\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nTHE KING'S CONSORT\r\n\r\nThe King's Consort has made over seventy records for Hyperion - \r\nvocal, instrumental, orchestral and choral - including music by \r\nHandel, Bach, Boccherini, Kuhnau, Astorga, Telemann, Vivaldi, \r\nSch\u00fctz, Gabrieli, Pergolesi, Mozart, Albinoni, Dowland and Couperin. \r\nIt is especially renowned for performances of Handel's large-scale \r\nworks (including Joshua, Deborah, The Occasional Oratonio, Judas \r\nMaccabaeus, Alexander Balus, Joseph and his Brethren, Acis and \r\nGalatea, Ottone, L'Allegro, il Pensero ed il Moderato, 'Music for \r\nCeremonial Occasions', the four coronation anthems, the Water Music \r\nand the Music for the Royal Fireworks) and the music of Henry \r\nPurcell. The orchestra has recorded three highly acclaimed series of \r\nPurcell's music: the complete anthems and services, the complete \r\nodes and welcome songs and the complete secular solo songs. Other \r\ncurrent recording projects include a series of sacred music by \r\nBach's contemporaries, and Vivaldi's sacred music. Two of the \r\norchestra's greatest recent successes on compact disc and in the \r\nconcert hall have been the massive Venetian reconstruction Lo \r\nSposalizio and Boccherini's 1800 setting of the Stabat Mater.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nRecorded in St. Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London,\r\n  on 9-14 July 2000\r\nRecording Engineer: Philip Hobbs\r\nRecording Producer: Ben Turner\r\nFront Design: Terry Shannon\r\nBooklet Editor: Tim Parry\r\nExecutive Producers: Edward Perry, Simon Perry\r\n\r\nFront Illustration:\r\n  Piazzetta and Bacino di San Marco in Venice (c.1735)\r\n  by Antonio Canaletto (1697-1768)\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------",
                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)"
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                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)\r\nSacred Music, Volume 6\r\n\r\nSusan Gritton, soprano\r\nNathalie Stutzmann, contralto\r\nHilary Summers, contralto\r\nAlexandra Gibson, contralto\r\n\r\nThe King's Consort\r\nChoir of the King's Consort\r\nRobert King, conductor\r\n\r\nHyperion CDA66809\r\nRec. 2000 [DDD]\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nBeatus Vir, RV795  [26:17]\r\n\r\n     I. Beatus vir (Allegro)\r\n    II. Gloria et divitiae (Allegro)\r\n   III. Beatus vir\r\n    IV. Exortum est in tenebris (Andante molto)\r\n     V. Beatus vir\r\n    VI. Jucundus homo (Allegro)\r\n   VII. Beatus vir\r\n  VIII. In memoria aeterna (Andante molto)\r\n    IX. Beatus vir\r\n     X. Paratum cor ejus (Andante)\r\n    XI. Beatus vir\r\n   XII. Dispersit, dedit pauperibus (Andante)\r\n  XIII. Beatus vir\r\n   XIV. Peccator videbit (Largo)\r\n    XV. Gloria Patri, et Filio (Allegro)\r\n\r\nSalve Regina, RV617  [10:12]\r\n\r\n     I. Salve Regina (Andante)\r\n    II. Ad te clamamus (Allegro\r\n   III. Eia ergo (Allegro)\r\n    IV. Et Jesum (Andante)\r\n\r\nLaudate Dominum, RV606  [1:59]\r\n\r\nIn exitu Israel, RV604  [3:38]\r\n\r\nNisi Dominus, RV608  [20:37]\r\n\r\n     I. Nisi Dominus (Allegro)\r\n    II. Vanum est vobis (Largo) [-]\r\n   III. Surgite (Presto - Adagio)\r\n    IV. Cum dederit (Andante)\r\n     V. Sicut sagittae (Allegro)\r\n    VI. Beatus vir (Andante)\r\n   VII. Gloria (Larghetto)\r\n  VIII. Sicut erat in principio (Allegro) [-]\r\n    IX. Amen (Allegro)\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nBefore the 1920s, the suggestion that Vivaldi had composed a \r\nsignificant corpus of sacred vocal music would have seemed absurd. \r\nAlmost no church music by him was known to have survived and, since \r\nhe had never been maestro di capella at any church, it was difficult \r\nto conceive of circumstances in which he would have been asked to \r\nprovide such music in bulk. True he was a priest, and for that \r\nreason would have been familiar with the sacred repertoire and, one \r\nsupposes, sympathetic to its aesthetic, but that in itself proves \r\nnothing. After all, several clerics among composers, Tartini being \r\nthe most pertinent example, eschewed vocal music altogether. The \r\nsituation changed only when Vivaldi's own huge working collection of \r\nmanuscripts came to light and was acquired for the National Library \r\nin Turin. It then became evident that his production of church music \r\nwas substantial - over fifty works have survived, and the existence \r\nof many more is recorded and that this music was varied, ambitious \r\nin form and expression, and on an artistic level at least equal to \r\nthat of his concertos. \r\n\r\nRaised as a violinist, Vivaldi probably wrote little or no church \r\nmusic until the second decade of the eighteenth century. But his \r\ntravels with his father as a 'jobbing' player often placed him in \r\nsituations where commissions for sacred works might have occurred. \r\nSuch was the probable origin of the earliest sacred work by him on \r\nwhich a date can be set, the Stabat Mater, RV621 ('RV' numbers refer \r\nto the standard modern catalogue of Vivaldi's works by Peter Ryom). \r\nVivaldi had visited Brescia in 1711 to play in the patronal festival \r\nof the Philippine church, Santa Maria della Pace; among the \r\ncompositions acquired by this church in the following year and \r\nlisted in its account book we find the Stabat Mater for alto and \r\nstrings, commissioned for the Feast of the Seven Sorrows of the \r\nBlessed Virgin, which in 1712 fell on 18 March. \r\n\r\nIn 1713 an event of the greatest importance for Vivaldi's career \r\noccurred. Francesco Gasparini, who was choirmaster at the Piet\u00e0, the \r\nVenetian charitable institution for foundlings where Vivaldi worked \r\nas a violin master and orchestral director, went on a leave from \r\nwhich he never returned. Until as late as 1719 the Piet\u00e0 failed to \r\nreplace him, which meant that Vivaldi (together with a colleague, \r\nthe singing teacher Pietro Scarpari) found himself invited to take \r\nover the main task of the maestro di coro: to supply the singers of \r\nthe institution with a steady stream of new compositions which would \r\nattract a well-heeled congregation to the chapel services and so \r\nencourage donations and bequests. For reasons of decorum, mixed \r\nchurch choirs were not acceptable in Catholic Europe at this time, \r\nand since the Piet\u00e0's male wards left the institution during \r\nadolescence to take up apprenticeships, it had no option but to \r\ntrain and use exclusively female residents as musicians. Remarkably, \r\nthe choir was laid out exactly as a normal male choir, with tenors \r\nand basses in addition to the expected sopranos and altos. The tenor \r\nparts, which have rather high compasses, were certainly sung as \r\nwritten; the bass parts were probably also sung much of the time at \r\nnotated pitch by a handful of women with exceptionally deep voices. \r\nIn case of difficulty, the bass parts could he transposed up an \r\noctave without damage to the harmony, since they were nearly always \r\ndoubled by instruments. Solo parts, however, were overwhelmingly for \r\nhigh voices: soprano or alto. More than the choir, the orchestra or \r\neven the composers of the music, these soloists were the 'star \r\nattraction' of music-making at the Piet\u00e0 - their names recorded for \r\nposterity in the letters and memoirs of visitors to its chapel. The \r\ntriumphant solismo of the contemporary opera houses could hardly \r\nfail to spill over into the sacred domain. \r\n\r\nLittle of Vivaldi's church music composed during this period \r\n(1713-1719) circulated in Italy outside the Piet\u00e0's walls, but some \r\nworks reached the Habsburg domains in central Europe. A visitor from \r\nBohemia, Balthasar Knapp, acquired a number before his return to \r\nPrague in 1717, and his collection appears to have been the nucleus \r\nof a modest Vivaldi cult which flourished in such centres as Prague. \r\nOsek (in north Bohemia), Brno (in Moravia) and even Breslau (in \r\nSilesia). Vivaldi's sacred works were also known in the capital of \r\nSaxony, Dresden, where the Bohemian composer Jan Dismas Zelenka took \r\na few pieces into his extensive collection of church music. \r\n\r\nThe surviving works from this 'first' period account for just under \r\nhalf of the total. A similar number date from a 'middle' period \r\nstretching from the mid-1720s to the early 1730s. These include \r\nnearly all the compositions laid out for two ensembles (in due cori, \r\nas Vivaldi describes this form of setting). Whereas the earlier \r\nworks are restrained in expression and generally quite simple in \r\ntexture, this second group is characterized by flamboyance and \r\ncontrapuntal ostentation. Many of these works appear to have a \r\nconnection with the Feast of St Lawrence Martyr on 10 August; \r\nVivaldi may have written them for the convent church of San Lorenzo \r\nin Venice (which every year celebrated its patronal festival with \r\ngreat pomp, commissioning music for Mass and Vespers from external \r\ncomposers), or perhaps for the church of San Lorenzo in Damaso, \r\nwhose protector was his Roman patron, Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni. What \r\nis certain is that these works were composed for male voices - the \r\nenergetic writing for the bass voices in such works as the Dixit \r\nDominus, RV594, would be unthinkable for a female singer. \r\n\r\nNear the end of his career, in 1739, Vivaldi once again supplied \r\nsacred vocal compositions to the Piet\u00e0 during an interregnum between \r\nchoirmasters - this time for payment, since he was no longer its \r\nemployee. Only three of the works, apparently written for Easter \r\nSunday, are extant today. They exemplify very clearly Vivaldi's \r\nturn, in his last years, to the fashionable galant style cultivated \r\nby younger Neapolitan composers, among them Vinci, Leo and Porpora. \r\n\r\nA clear majority of the surviving works are for solo voice or \r\nvoices. These include all the motets, introduzioni (an introduzioni \r\nis a special kind of motet designed to precede the setting of a \r\nPsalm or a section of the Mass), hymns and votive antiphons, besides \r\na few of the Psalms themselves. The remaining works are either - in \r\nthe language of the time - pieno (for choir only) or concertato (for \r\nchoir with one or more soloists). The supporting orchestra is most \r\noften made up merely of strings and continuo, but several of the \r\ncompositions include wind instruments or obbligato parts. The \r\nvitality and idiomatic quality of the instrumental writing in these \r\nworks is unrivalled in Italian sacred vocal music of the period. \r\n\r\nA clear distinction must be made between the works on liturgical \r\ntexts - texts which are unalterable and have their appointed place \r\nin the church calendar - and those on freely invented poetic texts \r\n(motets and introduzioni). The former mostly employ forms either \r\npeculiar to church music (for example, the so-called 'church aria' \r\nresembling the outer section of a da capo aria) or freely derived \r\nfrom instrumental music, while the latter follow secular models in \r\ntheir adoption of recitative and the da capo aria. A very few \r\nmovements in the 'liturgical' works observe the stile antico based \r\n(at some remove, and not without modification) on the polyphonic \r\nlanguage of sixteenth-century vocal music. Vivaldi seems to have had \r\ngreat difficulty in reproducing this style, since the specimens \r\ncontained in his works include several instances of plagiarism. \r\n\r\nThe greatness of Vivaldi's sacred vocal music resides not in its \r\nhistorical influence, for it seems not to have circulated very \r\nwidely in his day and (unlike his concertos) not to have initiated \r\nany practice copied by other composers, but rather in its consummate \r\nartistry and high level of inspiration. If Vivaldi does not quite \r\nhave the musical gifts of a Bach, a Handel or even a Pergolesi, he \r\nhas a manner of expression which is entirely individual and \r\nunmistakable, even in his least substantial works. In his best \r\nmovements one discerns an almost shocking radicalism: a willingness \r\nto strip music down to its core and reconstitute it from these \r\nsimplest elements. There is also a powerful instinct for thematic \r\nintegration at work; time and again, analysis reveals how the same \r\nsimple ideas inform each movement of a composite work and impart \r\nunity to it. The often unexpectedly subtle word-painting testifies \r\nto the thoughtfulness which Vivaldi brought to these compositions. \r\nThey can accurately be described as the bridge between his \r\nimagination as a musician and his conviction as a priest: the point \r\non which all facets of his complex personality converged. \r\n\r\n\r\nBEATUS VIR, RV795\r\n(Susan Gritton, soprano; Nathalie Stutzmann, Hilary Summers & \r\nAlexandra Gibson, contraltos)\r\n\r\nThis setting, closely related to the well-known setting of the same \r\npsalm for double choir, RV597 (the 'reversed' RV number is wholly \r\nfortuitous), was recognised as a composition of Vivaldi less than \r\ntwenty years ago when fragments of it were discovered in the library \r\nof the Conservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. Its \r\nposition in the part-books containing it established clearly that it \r\nbelonged to the group of psalms bought from Vivaldi by the Piet\u00e0 \r\nshortly before Easter 1739 and probably performed on that occasion. \r\nRemarkably, the surviving parts matched perfectly those of a work \r\nsurviving in a non-autograph score in the S\u00e4chsische \r\nLandesbibliothek in Dresden. There was one complication: in Dresden \r\nthe work was attributed to Baldassarre Galuppi (1706-1785), the \r\nleading Venetian composer of the first generation after Vivaldi. \r\n\r\nThe concordances in Venice and Turin, as well as the totally \r\nVivaldian style of the work, would probably have sufficed by \r\nthemselves to confirm the Dresden score of RV795 as authentic in all \r\nrespects. However, added support comes from the fact that the \r\nmanuscript was prepared by the Venetian music-copying firm of Iseppo \r\nBaldan, notorious among musicologists (especially Haydn scholars) \r\nfor the exceptionally large number of deliberately misattributed \r\nworks among its products. Baldan's copying shop supplied the Dresden \r\ncourt, in the decades immediately following Vivaldi's death in 1741, \r\nwith large quantities of sacred vocal works by Galuppi: one can \r\neasily imagine that this Beatus vir, whose autograph manuscript it \r\nhad perhaps acquired from the composer's estate via Vivaldi's \r\nnephews (who were themselves professional copyists with links to \r\nBaldan), was 'slipped in' under the younger composer's name to make \r\nup the numbers. \r\n\r\nClose examination shows that RV597 and RV795 go back to a common \r\narchetype, a setting of the Beatus vir for single choir and \r\norchestra that Vivaldi probably wrote during the 1710s. RV597, \r\nprepared in the 1720s, is an adaptation for male voices in which the \r\nensemble is expanded to include a second choir and orchestra. RV795 \r\nretains the single ensemble, replaces selected movements by others \r\nwritten in a galant style, and casts aside the solo bass in favour \r\nof a 'pseudo bass' singing in the alto register. The last-mentioned \r\nchange is most evident in the terzet 'In memoria aeterna', where the \r\nsecond contralto doubles the instrumental bass an octave above, \r\nproducing a novel style of part-writing. The tenor required in the \r\nsame terzet and in the 'Peccator videbit' movement was presumably \r\nAmbrosina (born c.1710), famous for her deep voice. \r\n\r\nThe differences between RV597 and RV795 mirror those between the \r\nmiddle (RV610) and late (RV611) versions of the Magnificat. Baldan's \r\ncopyist probably worked directly from the composer's autograph \r\nmanuscript, in which the second movement (similar to the one found \r\nin RV597 but not including the repetitions of phrases assigned to \r\nthe second coro) had evidently not been deleted or removed when its \r\nintended replacement was inserted. Consequently, the Dresden source \r\ninnocently transmits two separate versions of the 'Gloriae et \r\ndivitiae' movement: one going back to the lost archetype and the \r\nother dating from the late 1730s. \r\n\r\nBecause of the stylistic gap between old and new elements, RV795 \r\noffers a fascinating glimpse of evolving musical practice at the \r\nPiet\u00e0 and of its ageing composer's attempts to keep his style \r\nup-to-date. \r\n\r\n\r\nSALVE REGINA RV617\r\n(Susan Gritton, soprano)\r\n\r\nVivaldi left three surviving settings of this Marian antiphon. Two \r\nare for solo alto and instruments laid out in two cori dating from \r\nthe 1720s at earliest. Unexpectedly, the third setting, a much \r\nearlier work for soprano and strings in F major, survives only in a \r\nnon-autograph manuscript preserved in the Moravian Museum in Brno, \r\nCzech Republic. It may have travelled to Bohemia in 1717 together \r\nwith a group of manuscripts of sacred works by Vivaldi collected by \r\nBalthasar Knapp, secretary to Count Kinsky. \r\n\r\nA highly unusual feature of the work in Brno is the scoring of its \r\nopening movement, in which the accompaniment consists of solo violin \r\nand continuo alone. There is a universal convention in Baroque music \r\nthat the outer movements of a multi-movement work should be fully \r\nscored: it is in the inner movements that the texture can be \r\nlightened or varied. Only in RV617 does one find Vivaldi departing \r\nfrom this principle in a sacred vocal work. If there is a \r\nhermeneutic reason underlying his choice, it may be a desire to make \r\nthe solo violin stand for Mary herself, to whom the soprano \r\naddresses his or her prayer. In the second movement, 'Ad te \r\nclamamus', the string tutti enters. The third movement, 'Eia ergo', \r\nbrings soloist and tutti together in a rich, concerto-like texture. \r\nThe final movement, 'Et Jesum', is a rocking siciliana in which the \r\ntutti and the solo violin accompany by turns. Without question, this \r\nis one of Vivaldi's most original sacred vocal compositions, and one \r\nin which his experience as a composer of concertos is most apparent. \r\n\r\n\r\nLAUDATE DOMINUM RV606\r\n(Choir)\r\n\r\nVivaldi wrote this concise but powerful single-movement setting of \r\nPsalm 116 (117 in Protestant bibles) for choir and strings in his \r\n'first' period at the Piet\u00e0. Having only two verses, plus the \r\nmandatory Lesser Doxology, the psalm could hardly have been treated \r\notherwise (it is the psalms with around ten verses that make the \r\nbest candidates for multi-movement treatment). Vivaldi concentrates \r\nmelodic and rhythmic interest in the part for unison violins, \r\ntreating the choir as a kind of 'texted continuo'. This violin part \r\nis based on a short, arching motive that in some shape or form \r\nreappears once or twice in literally every bar. Half-way through, \r\nthe composer produces a masterstroke, illustrating the word \r\n'misericordia' (mercy) with a surging progression in sustained notes \r\nthat takes the music momentarily into the distant region of B flat \r\nminor (the home key is D minor). \r\n\r\n\r\nIN EXITU ISRAEL RV604\r\n(Choir)\r\n\r\nWith its twenty-seven verses (not including the two comprising the \r\nLesser Doxology), Psalm 113 (Psalms 114 and 115 combined in \r\nProtestant bibles) has always proved a handful for composers. In \r\nopting to set it for choir alone in a single, continuously running \r\nmovement, Vivaldi took a very rational decision, even if, in his \r\nhaste to complete the movement, he managed to confuse verse 4 with \r\nverse 6, thereby accidentally skipping a couple of verses. \r\n\r\nRV604 belongs to the group of psalms Vivaldi wrote for Easter Sunday \r\nat the Piet\u00e0 in 1739. It survives not only in Turin but also in the \r\nfragments of the Piet\u00e0's repertory today preserved at the \r\nConservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. It is \r\namusing to see, from the parts copied out for their own use by the \r\nPiet\u00e0's musicians, that they had just as much difficulty as we \r\nsometimes have today in deciphering Vivaldi's intentions. \r\n\r\nThe composer does his best to keep the musical interest alive in \r\nthis 97-bar movement. He varies the accompanimental patterns on the \r\nviolins, changes key in effective and sometimes surprising ways, and \r\nutilises different kinds of vocal texture (albeit without ever \r\nforegoing a pervasive homophony). Imitating the structure of the \r\npsalm's verses, he sometimes adopts a responsorial style in which \r\nthe solo sopranos alone are answered by the full choir. \r\nWord-painting is rarely encountered. Because of its deliberate \r\nsimplicity, this setting shows few differences from the comparable \r\npiena settings from the 'first' period, RV606 and 607. which were \r\ncomposed over twenty years earlier. \r\n\r\n\r\nNISI DOMINUS RV608\r\n(Nathalie Stutzmann, contralto)\r\n\r\nRV608 is Vivaldi's most extended and artistically ambitious psalm \r\nsetting for solo voice to have survived. It certainly dates from his \r\n'first' period, but no one has yet established whether or not it was \r\nwritten for the Piet\u00e0. It survives in Turin not as an autograph \r\nscore but as a set of parts copied out by the composer himself, his \r\nfather and other hands. This suggests that its original, or perhaps \r\nits eventual, destination lay outside the Piet\u00e0's walls. It was \r\nVivaldi's father who copied out the obbligato viola d'amore part for \r\nthe 'Gloria'. In its notated form, this part treats three of the \r\nfour upper strings as transposing 'instruments' - the open strings \r\nof the viola d'amore are tuned to D, F and D instead of the E, D and \r\nG familiar to a violinist - a procedure that leads to bizarre visual \r\neffects. Fingered as they would be on the violin, however, the notes \r\nmake perfect harmonic and melodic sense. \r\n\r\nIt has long been known that the Piet\u00e0 produced excellent players of \r\nthe six-stringed viola d'amore. Among them were the celebrated Anna \r\nMaria (1696-1782), for whom Vivaldi composed two viola d'amore \r\nconcertos, and her successor as principal violinist, Chiaretta \r\n(1718-1796). Only recently did the first testimony to Vivaldi \r\nhimself as a virtuoso of that instrument turn up: in 1717, en route \r\nfrom Bologna to Venice, he celebrated a stopover in the small city \r\nof Cento) with an impromptu performance on the viola d'amore in a \r\nlocal church, which was packed so full that the overspilling \r\nlisteners had to jostle for space outside in the road. So the \r\nintended soloist in the Nisi Dominus could well have been the \r\ncomposer himself. \r\n\r\nThe nine movements are as varied in style and scoring as one could \r\nimagine. Two ('Vanum est vobis' and 'Beatus vir') are simple \r\ncontinuo arias, while one ('Sicut sagittae') has a string \r\naccompaniment in unison with the voice, and two others ('Nisi \r\nDominus', with its abridged and retexted reprise 'Sicut erat in \r\nprincipio') are church arias in a lively concerto style. 'Cum \r\ndederit' conveys drowsiness by being set in a slow siciliana style \r\nand employing a distinctive motive with chromatically ascending \r\nlines that the composer often introduces in association with the \r\nidea of sleep (as in the second solo episode in the first movement \r\nof his 'Spring' Concerto, RV269); for this movement leaden mutes \r\n(piombi) are prescribed. \r\n\r\nThe most original movement is the third ('Surgite'), which is cast \r\nas an accompanied recitative, counterposing rapid ascending figures \r\nexpressing the act of standing up to slow, reflective passages for \r\nthe 'bread of sorrows'. The final 'Amen' imitates the style of an \r\n'Alleluia' in a motet. But the spiritual fulcrum of the Nisi Dominus \r\nlies in the 'Gloria', which instead of being the usual expression of \r\nsimple joy, is a brooding, dark-hued movement full of solitude. \r\n\r\nt- Michael Talbot \u00a92000\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nTHE KING'S CONSORT\r\n\r\nThe King's Consort has made over seventy records for Hyperion - \r\nvocal, instrumental, orchestral and choral - including music by \r\nHandel, Bach, Boccherini, Kuhnau, Astorga, Telemann, Vivaldi, \r\nSch\u00fctz, Gabrieli, Pergolesi, Mozart, Albinoni, Dowland and Couperin. \r\nIt is especially renowned for performances of Handel's large-scale \r\nworks (including Joshua, Deborah, The Occasional Oratonio, Judas \r\nMaccabaeus, Alexander Balus, Joseph and his Brethren, Acis and \r\nGalatea, Ottone, L'Allegro, il Pensero ed il Moderato, 'Music for \r\nCeremonial Occasions', the four coronation anthems, the Water Music \r\nand the Music for the Royal Fireworks) and the music of Henry \r\nPurcell. The orchestra has recorded three highly acclaimed series of \r\nPurcell's music: the complete anthems and services, the complete \r\nodes and welcome songs and the complete secular solo songs. Other \r\ncurrent recording projects include a series of sacred music by \r\nBach's contemporaries, and Vivaldi's sacred music. Two of the \r\norchestra's greatest recent successes on compact disc and in the \r\nconcert hall have been the massive Venetian reconstruction Lo \r\nSposalizio and Boccherini's 1800 setting of the Stabat Mater.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\nRecorded in St. Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London,\r\n  on 9-14 July 2000\r\nRecording Engineer: Philip Hobbs\r\nRecording Producer: Ben Turner\r\nFront Design: Terry Shannon\r\nBooklet Editor: Tim Parry\r\nExecutive Producers: Edward Perry, Simon Perry\r\n\r\nFront Illustration:\r\n  Piazzetta and Bacino di San Marco in Venice (c.1735)\r\n  by Antonio Canaletto (1697-1768)\r\n\r\n\r\n----------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n",
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                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)&#13;&#10;Sacred Music, Volume 6&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Susan Gritton, soprano&#13;&#10;Nathalie Stutzmann, contralto&#13;&#10;Hilary Summers, contralto&#13;&#10;Alexandra Gibson, contralto&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The King's Consort&#13;&#10;Choir of the King's Consort&#13;&#10;Robert King, conductor&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Hyperion CDA66809&#13;&#10;Rec. 2000 [DDD]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;----------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Beatus Vir, RV795  [26:17]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;     I. Beatus vir (Allegro)&#13;&#10;    II. Gloria et divitiae (Allegro)&#13;&#10;   III. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;    IV. Exortum est in tenebris (Andante molto)&#13;&#10;     V. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;    VI. Jucundus homo (Allegro)&#13;&#10;   VII. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;  VIII. In memoria aeterna (Andante molto)&#13;&#10;    IX. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;     X. Paratum cor ejus (Andante)&#13;&#10;    XI. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;   XII. Dispersit, dedit pauperibus (Andante)&#13;&#10;  XIII. Beatus vir&#13;&#10;   XIV. Peccator videbit (Largo)&#13;&#10;    XV. Gloria Patri, et Filio (Allegro)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Salve Regina, RV617  [10:12]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;     I. Salve Regina (Andante)&#13;&#10;    II. Ad te clamamus (Allegro&#13;&#10;   III. Eia ergo (Allegro)&#13;&#10;    IV. Et Jesum (Andante)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Laudate Dominum, RV606  [1:59]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;In exitu Israel, RV604  [3:38]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Nisi Dominus, RV608  [20:37]&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;     I. Nisi Dominus (Allegro)&#13;&#10;    II. Vanum est vobis (Largo) [-]&#13;&#10;   III. Surgite (Presto - Adagio)&#13;&#10;    IV. Cum dederit (Andante)&#13;&#10;     V. Sicut sagittae (Allegro)&#13;&#10;    VI. Beatus vir (Andante)&#13;&#10;   VII. Gloria (Larghetto)&#13;&#10;  VIII. Sicut erat in principio (Allegro) [-]&#13;&#10;    IX. Amen (Allegro)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;----------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Before the 1920s, the suggestion that Vivaldi had composed a &#13;&#10;significant corpus of sacred vocal music would have seemed absurd. &#13;&#10;Almost no church music by him was known to have survived and, since &#13;&#10;he had never been maestro di capella at any church, it was difficult &#13;&#10;to conceive of circumstances in which he would have been asked to &#13;&#10;provide such music in bulk. True he was a priest, and for that &#13;&#10;reason would have been familiar with the sacred repertoire and, one &#13;&#10;supposes, sympathetic to its aesthetic, but that in itself proves &#13;&#10;nothing. After all, several clerics among composers, Tartini being &#13;&#10;the most pertinent example, eschewed vocal music altogether. The &#13;&#10;situation changed only when Vivaldi's own huge working collection of &#13;&#10;manuscripts came to light and was acquired for the National Library &#13;&#10;in Turin. It then became evident that his production of church music &#13;&#10;was substantial - over fifty works have survived, and the existence &#13;&#10;of many more is recorded and that this music was varied, ambitious &#13;&#10;in form and expression, and on an artistic level at least equal to &#13;&#10;that of his concertos. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Raised as a violinist, Vivaldi probably wrote little or no church &#13;&#10;music until the second decade of the eighteenth century. But his &#13;&#10;travels with his father as a 'jobbing' player often placed him in &#13;&#10;situations where commissions for sacred works might have occurred. &#13;&#10;Such was the probable origin of the earliest sacred work by him on &#13;&#10;which a date can be set, the Stabat Mater, RV621 ('RV' numbers refer &#13;&#10;to the standard modern catalogue of Vivaldi's works by Peter Ryom). &#13;&#10;Vivaldi had visited Brescia in 1711 to play in the patronal festival &#13;&#10;of the Philippine church, Santa Maria della Pace; among the &#13;&#10;compositions acquired by this church in the following year and &#13;&#10;listed in its account book we find the Stabat Mater for alto and &#13;&#10;strings, commissioned for the Feast of the Seven Sorrows of the &#13;&#10;Blessed Virgin, which in 1712 fell on 18 March. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;In 1713 an event of the greatest importance for Vivaldi's career &#13;&#10;occurred. Francesco Gasparini, who was choirmaster at the Piet&#224;, the &#13;&#10;Venetian charitable institution for foundlings where Vivaldi worked &#13;&#10;as a violin master and orchestral director, went on a leave from &#13;&#10;which he never returned. Until as late as 1719 the Piet&#224; failed to &#13;&#10;replace him, which meant that Vivaldi (together with a colleague, &#13;&#10;the singing teacher Pietro Scarpari) found himself invited to take &#13;&#10;over the main task of the maestro di coro: to supply the singers of &#13;&#10;the institution with a steady stream of new compositions which would &#13;&#10;attract a well-heeled congregation to the chapel services and so &#13;&#10;encourage donations and bequests. For reasons of decorum, mixed &#13;&#10;church choirs were not acceptable in Catholic Europe at this time, &#13;&#10;and since the Piet&#224;'s male wards left the institution during &#13;&#10;adolescence to take up apprenticeships, it had no option but to &#13;&#10;train and use exclusively female residents as musicians. Remarkably, &#13;&#10;the choir was laid out exactly as a normal male choir, with tenors &#13;&#10;and basses in addition to the expected sopranos and altos. The tenor &#13;&#10;parts, which have rather high compasses, were certainly sung as &#13;&#10;written; the bass parts were probably also sung much of the time at &#13;&#10;notated pitch by a handful of women with exceptionally deep voices. &#13;&#10;In case of difficulty, the bass parts could he transposed up an &#13;&#10;octave without damage to the harmony, since they were nearly always &#13;&#10;doubled by instruments. Solo parts, however, were overwhelmingly for &#13;&#10;high voices: soprano or alto. More than the choir, the orchestra or &#13;&#10;even the composers of the music, these soloists were the 'star &#13;&#10;attraction' of music-making at the Piet&#224; - their names recorded for &#13;&#10;posterity in the letters and memoirs of visitors to its chapel. The &#13;&#10;triumphant solismo of the contemporary opera houses could hardly &#13;&#10;fail to spill over into the sacred domain. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Little of Vivaldi's church music composed during this period &#13;&#10;(1713-1719) circulated in Italy outside the Piet&#224;'s walls, but some &#13;&#10;works reached the Habsburg domains in central Europe. A visitor from &#13;&#10;Bohemia, Balthasar Knapp, acquired a number before his return to &#13;&#10;Prague in 1717, and his collection appears to have been the nucleus &#13;&#10;of a modest Vivaldi cult which flourished in such centres as Prague. &#13;&#10;Osek (in north Bohemia), Brno (in Moravia) and even Breslau (in &#13;&#10;Silesia). Vivaldi's sacred works were also known in the capital of &#13;&#10;Saxony, Dresden, where the Bohemian composer Jan Dismas Zelenka took &#13;&#10;a few pieces into his extensive collection of church music. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The surviving works from this 'first' period account for just under &#13;&#10;half of the total. A similar number date from a 'middle' period &#13;&#10;stretching from the mid-1720s to the early 1730s. These include &#13;&#10;nearly all the compositions laid out for two ensembles (in due cori, &#13;&#10;as Vivaldi describes this form of setting). Whereas the earlier &#13;&#10;works are restrained in expression and generally quite simple in &#13;&#10;texture, this second group is characterized by flamboyance and &#13;&#10;contrapuntal ostentation. Many of these works appear to have a &#13;&#10;connection with the Feast of St Lawrence Martyr on 10 August; &#13;&#10;Vivaldi may have written them for the convent church of San Lorenzo &#13;&#10;in Venice (which every year celebrated its patronal festival with &#13;&#10;great pomp, commissioning music for Mass and Vespers from external &#13;&#10;composers), or perhaps for the church of San Lorenzo in Damaso, &#13;&#10;whose protector was his Roman patron, Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni. What &#13;&#10;is certain is that these works were composed for male voices - the &#13;&#10;energetic writing for the bass voices in such works as the Dixit &#13;&#10;Dominus, RV594, would be unthinkable for a female singer. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Near the end of his career, in 1739, Vivaldi once again supplied &#13;&#10;sacred vocal compositions to the Piet&#224; during an interregnum between &#13;&#10;choirmasters - this time for payment, since he was no longer its &#13;&#10;employee. Only three of the works, apparently written for Easter &#13;&#10;Sunday, are extant today. They exemplify very clearly Vivaldi's &#13;&#10;turn, in his last years, to the fashionable galant style cultivated &#13;&#10;by younger Neapolitan composers, among them Vinci, Leo and Porpora. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;A clear majority of the surviving works are for solo voice or &#13;&#10;voices. These include all the motets, introduzioni (an introduzioni &#13;&#10;is a special kind of motet designed to precede the setting of a &#13;&#10;Psalm or a section of the Mass), hymns and votive antiphons, besides &#13;&#10;a few of the Psalms themselves. The remaining works are either - in &#13;&#10;the language of the time - pieno (for choir only) or concertato (for &#13;&#10;choir with one or more soloists). The supporting orchestra is most &#13;&#10;often made up merely of strings and continuo, but several of the &#13;&#10;compositions include wind instruments or obbligato parts. The &#13;&#10;vitality and idiomatic quality of the instrumental writing in these &#13;&#10;works is unrivalled in Italian sacred vocal music of the period. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;A clear distinction must be made between the works on liturgical &#13;&#10;texts - texts which are unalterable and have their appointed place &#13;&#10;in the church calendar - and those on freely invented poetic texts &#13;&#10;(motets and introduzioni). The former mostly employ forms either &#13;&#10;peculiar to church music (for example, the so-called 'church aria' &#13;&#10;resembling the outer section of a da capo aria) or freely derived &#13;&#10;from instrumental music, while the latter follow secular models in &#13;&#10;their adoption of recitative and the da capo aria. A very few &#13;&#10;movements in the 'liturgical' works observe the stile antico based &#13;&#10;(at some remove, and not without modification) on the polyphonic &#13;&#10;language of sixteenth-century vocal music. Vivaldi seems to have had &#13;&#10;great difficulty in reproducing this style, since the specimens &#13;&#10;contained in his works include several instances of plagiarism. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The greatness of Vivaldi's sacred vocal music resides not in its &#13;&#10;historical influence, for it seems not to have circulated very &#13;&#10;widely in his day and (unlike his concertos) not to have initiated &#13;&#10;any practice copied by other composers, but rather in its consummate &#13;&#10;artistry and high level of inspiration. If Vivaldi does not quite &#13;&#10;have the musical gifts of a Bach, a Handel or even a Pergolesi, he &#13;&#10;has a manner of expression which is entirely individual and &#13;&#10;unmistakable, even in his least substantial works. In his best &#13;&#10;movements one discerns an almost shocking radicalism: a willingness &#13;&#10;to strip music down to its core and reconstitute it from these &#13;&#10;simplest elements. There is also a powerful instinct for thematic &#13;&#10;integration at work; time and again, analysis reveals how the same &#13;&#10;simple ideas inform each movement of a composite work and impart &#13;&#10;unity to it. The often unexpectedly subtle word-painting testifies &#13;&#10;to the thoughtfulness which Vivaldi brought to these compositions. &#13;&#10;They can accurately be described as the bridge between his &#13;&#10;imagination as a musician and his conviction as a priest: the point &#13;&#10;on which all facets of his complex personality converged. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;BEATUS VIR, RV795&#13;&#10;(Susan Gritton, soprano; Nathalie Stutzmann, Hilary Summers &amp; &#13;&#10;Alexandra Gibson, contraltos)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;This setting, closely related to the well-known setting of the same &#13;&#10;psalm for double choir, RV597 (the 'reversed' RV number is wholly &#13;&#10;fortuitous), was recognised as a composition of Vivaldi less than &#13;&#10;twenty years ago when fragments of it were discovered in the library &#13;&#10;of the Conservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. Its &#13;&#10;position in the part-books containing it established clearly that it &#13;&#10;belonged to the group of psalms bought from Vivaldi by the Piet&#224; &#13;&#10;shortly before Easter 1739 and probably performed on that occasion. &#13;&#10;Remarkably, the surviving parts matched perfectly those of a work &#13;&#10;surviving in a non-autograph score in the S&#228;chsische &#13;&#10;Landesbibliothek in Dresden. There was one complication: in Dresden &#13;&#10;the work was attributed to Baldassarre Galuppi (1706-1785), the &#13;&#10;leading Venetian composer of the first generation after Vivaldi. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The concordances in Venice and Turin, as well as the totally &#13;&#10;Vivaldian style of the work, would probably have sufficed by &#13;&#10;themselves to confirm the Dresden score of RV795 as authentic in all &#13;&#10;respects. However, added support comes from the fact that the &#13;&#10;manuscript was prepared by the Venetian music-copying firm of Iseppo &#13;&#10;Baldan, notorious among musicologists (especially Haydn scholars) &#13;&#10;for the exceptionally large number of deliberately misattributed &#13;&#10;works among its products. Baldan's copying shop supplied the Dresden &#13;&#10;court, in the decades immediately following Vivaldi's death in 1741, &#13;&#10;with large quantities of sacred vocal works by Galuppi: one can &#13;&#10;easily imagine that this Beatus vir, whose autograph manuscript it &#13;&#10;had perhaps acquired from the composer's estate via Vivaldi's &#13;&#10;nephews (who were themselves professional copyists with links to &#13;&#10;Baldan), was 'slipped in' under the younger composer's name to make &#13;&#10;up the numbers. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Close examination shows that RV597 and RV795 go back to a common &#13;&#10;archetype, a setting of the Beatus vir for single choir and &#13;&#10;orchestra that Vivaldi probably wrote during the 1710s. RV597, &#13;&#10;prepared in the 1720s, is an adaptation for male voices in which the &#13;&#10;ensemble is expanded to include a second choir and orchestra. RV795 &#13;&#10;retains the single ensemble, replaces selected movements by others &#13;&#10;written in a galant style, and casts aside the solo bass in favour &#13;&#10;of a 'pseudo bass' singing in the alto register. The last-mentioned &#13;&#10;change is most evident in the terzet 'In memoria aeterna', where the &#13;&#10;second contralto doubles the instrumental bass an octave above, &#13;&#10;producing a novel style of part-writing. The tenor required in the &#13;&#10;same terzet and in the 'Peccator videbit' movement was presumably &#13;&#10;Ambrosina (born c.1710), famous for her deep voice. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The differences between RV597 and RV795 mirror those between the &#13;&#10;middle (RV610) and late (RV611) versions of the Magnificat. Baldan's &#13;&#10;copyist probably worked directly from the composer's autograph &#13;&#10;manuscript, in which the second movement (similar to the one found &#13;&#10;in RV597 but not including the repetitions of phrases assigned to &#13;&#10;the second coro) had evidently not been deleted or removed when its &#13;&#10;intended replacement was inserted. Consequently, the Dresden source &#13;&#10;innocently transmits two separate versions of the 'Gloriae et &#13;&#10;divitiae' movement: one going back to the lost archetype and the &#13;&#10;other dating from the late 1730s. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Because of the stylistic gap between old and new elements, RV795 &#13;&#10;offers a fascinating glimpse of evolving musical practice at the &#13;&#10;Piet&#224; and of its ageing composer's attempts to keep his style &#13;&#10;up-to-date. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;SALVE REGINA RV617&#13;&#10;(Susan Gritton, soprano)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Vivaldi left three surviving settings of this Marian antiphon. Two &#13;&#10;are for solo alto and instruments laid out in two cori dating from &#13;&#10;the 1720s at earliest. Unexpectedly, the third setting, a much &#13;&#10;earlier work for soprano and strings in F major, survives only in a &#13;&#10;non-autograph manuscript preserved in the Moravian Museum in Brno, &#13;&#10;Czech Republic. It may have travelled to Bohemia in 1717 together &#13;&#10;with a group of manuscripts of sacred works by Vivaldi collected by &#13;&#10;Balthasar Knapp, secretary to Count Kinsky. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;A highly unusual feature of the work in Brno is the scoring of its &#13;&#10;opening movement, in which the accompaniment consists of solo violin &#13;&#10;and continuo alone. There is a universal convention in Baroque music &#13;&#10;that the outer movements of a multi-movement work should be fully &#13;&#10;scored: it is in the inner movements that the texture can be &#13;&#10;lightened or varied. Only in RV617 does one find Vivaldi departing &#13;&#10;from this principle in a sacred vocal work. If there is a &#13;&#10;hermeneutic reason underlying his choice, it may be a desire to make &#13;&#10;the solo violin stand for Mary herself, to whom the soprano &#13;&#10;addresses his or her prayer. In the second movement, 'Ad te &#13;&#10;clamamus', the string tutti enters. The third movement, 'Eia ergo', &#13;&#10;brings soloist and tutti together in a rich, concerto-like texture. &#13;&#10;The final movement, 'Et Jesum', is a rocking siciliana in which the &#13;&#10;tutti and the solo violin accompany by turns. Without question, this &#13;&#10;is one of Vivaldi's most original sacred vocal compositions, and one &#13;&#10;in which his experience as a composer of concertos is most apparent. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;LAUDATE DOMINUM RV606&#13;&#10;(Choir)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Vivaldi wrote this concise but powerful single-movement setting of &#13;&#10;Psalm 116 (117 in Protestant bibles) for choir and strings in his &#13;&#10;'first' period at the Piet&#224;. Having only two verses, plus the &#13;&#10;mandatory Lesser Doxology, the psalm could hardly have been treated &#13;&#10;otherwise (it is the psalms with around ten verses that make the &#13;&#10;best candidates for multi-movement treatment). Vivaldi concentrates &#13;&#10;melodic and rhythmic interest in the part for unison violins, &#13;&#10;treating the choir as a kind of 'texted continuo'. This violin part &#13;&#10;is based on a short, arching motive that in some shape or form &#13;&#10;reappears once or twice in literally every bar. Half-way through, &#13;&#10;the composer produces a masterstroke, illustrating the word &#13;&#10;'misericordia' (mercy) with a surging progression in sustained notes &#13;&#10;that takes the music momentarily into the distant region of B flat &#13;&#10;minor (the home key is D minor). &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;IN EXITU ISRAEL RV604&#13;&#10;(Choir)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;With its twenty-seven verses (not including the two comprising the &#13;&#10;Lesser Doxology), Psalm 113 (Psalms 114 and 115 combined in &#13;&#10;Protestant bibles) has always proved a handful for composers. In &#13;&#10;opting to set it for choir alone in a single, continuously running &#13;&#10;movement, Vivaldi took a very rational decision, even if, in his &#13;&#10;haste to complete the movement, he managed to confuse verse 4 with &#13;&#10;verse 6, thereby accidentally skipping a couple of verses. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;RV604 belongs to the group of psalms Vivaldi wrote for Easter Sunday &#13;&#10;at the Piet&#224; in 1739. It survives not only in Turin but also in the &#13;&#10;fragments of the Piet&#224;'s repertory today preserved at the &#13;&#10;Conservatorio di Musica 'Benedetto Marcello' in Venice. It is &#13;&#10;amusing to see, from the parts copied out for their own use by the &#13;&#10;Piet&#224;'s musicians, that they had just as much difficulty as we &#13;&#10;sometimes have today in deciphering Vivaldi's intentions. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The composer does his best to keep the musical interest alive in &#13;&#10;this 97-bar movement. He varies the accompanimental patterns on the &#13;&#10;violins, changes key in effective and sometimes surprising ways, and &#13;&#10;utilises different kinds of vocal texture (albeit without ever &#13;&#10;foregoing a pervasive homophony). Imitating the structure of the &#13;&#10;psalm's verses, he sometimes adopts a responsorial style in which &#13;&#10;the solo sopranos alone are answered by the full choir. &#13;&#10;Word-painting is rarely encountered. Because of its deliberate &#13;&#10;simplicity, this setting shows few differences from the comparable &#13;&#10;piena settings from the 'first' period, RV606 and 607. which were &#13;&#10;composed over twenty years earlier. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;NISI DOMINUS RV608&#13;&#10;(Nathalie Stutzmann, contralto)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;RV608 is Vivaldi's most extended and artistically ambitious psalm &#13;&#10;setting for solo voice to have survived. It certainly dates from his &#13;&#10;'first' period, but no one has yet established whether or not it was &#13;&#10;written for the Piet&#224;. It survives in Turin not as an autograph &#13;&#10;score but as a set of parts copied out by the composer himself, his &#13;&#10;father and other hands. This suggests that its original, or perhaps &#13;&#10;its eventual, destination lay outside the Piet&#224;'s walls. It was &#13;&#10;Vivaldi's father who copied out the obbligato viola d'amore part for &#13;&#10;the 'Gloria'. In its notated form, this part treats three of the &#13;&#10;four upper strings as transposing 'instruments' - the open strings &#13;&#10;of the viola d'amore are tuned to D, F and D instead of the E, D and &#13;&#10;G familiar to a violinist - a procedure that leads to bizarre visual &#13;&#10;effects. Fingered as they would be on the violin, however, the notes &#13;&#10;make perfect harmonic and melodic sense. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;It has long been known that the Piet&#224; produced excellent players of &#13;&#10;the six-stringed viola d'amore. Among them were the celebrated Anna &#13;&#10;Maria (1696-1782), for whom Vivaldi composed two viola d'amore &#13;&#10;concertos, and her successor as principal violinist, Chiaretta &#13;&#10;(1718-1796). Only recently did the first testimony to Vivaldi &#13;&#10;himself as a virtuoso of that instrument turn up: in 1717, en route &#13;&#10;from Bologna to Venice, he celebrated a stopover in the small city &#13;&#10;of Cento) with an impromptu performance on the viola d'amore in a &#13;&#10;local church, which was packed so full that the overspilling &#13;&#10;listeners had to jostle for space outside in the road. So the &#13;&#10;intended soloist in the Nisi Dominus could well have been the &#13;&#10;composer himself. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The nine movements are as varied in style and scoring as one could &#13;&#10;imagine. Two ('Vanum est vobis' and 'Beatus vir') are simple &#13;&#10;continuo arias, while one ('Sicut sagittae') has a string &#13;&#10;accompaniment in unison with the voice, and two others ('Nisi &#13;&#10;Dominus', with its abridged and retexted reprise 'Sicut erat in &#13;&#10;principio') are church arias in a lively concerto style. 'Cum &#13;&#10;dederit' conveys drowsiness by being set in a slow siciliana style &#13;&#10;and employing a distinctive motive with chromatically ascending &#13;&#10;lines that the composer often introduces in association with the &#13;&#10;idea of sleep (as in the second solo episode in the first movement &#13;&#10;of his 'Spring' Concerto, RV269); for this movement leaden mutes &#13;&#10;(piombi) are prescribed. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The most original movement is the third ('Surgite'), which is cast &#13;&#10;as an accompanied recitative, counterposing rapid ascending figures &#13;&#10;expressing the act of standing up to slow, reflective passages for &#13;&#10;the 'bread of sorrows'. The final 'Amen' imitates the style of an &#13;&#10;'Alleluia' in a motet. But the spiritual fulcrum of the Nisi Dominus &#13;&#10;lies in the 'Gloria', which instead of being the usual expression of &#13;&#10;simple joy, is a brooding, dark-hued movement full of solitude. &#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;t- Michael Talbot &#169;2000&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;----------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;THE KING'S CONSORT&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;The King's Consort has made over seventy records for Hyperion - &#13;&#10;vocal, instrumental, orchestral and choral - including music by &#13;&#10;Handel, Bach, Boccherini, Kuhnau, Astorga, Telemann, Vivaldi, &#13;&#10;Sch&#252;tz, Gabrieli, Pergolesi, Mozart, Albinoni, Dowland and Couperin. &#13;&#10;It is especially renowned for performances of Handel's large-scale &#13;&#10;works (including Joshua, Deborah, The Occasional Oratonio, Judas &#13;&#10;Maccabaeus, Alexander Balus, Joseph and his Brethren, Acis and &#13;&#10;Galatea, Ottone, L'Allegro, il Pensero ed il Moderato, 'Music for &#13;&#10;Ceremonial Occasions', the four coronation anthems, the Water Music &#13;&#10;and the Music for the Royal Fireworks) and the music of Henry &#13;&#10;Purcell. The orchestra has recorded three highly acclaimed series of &#13;&#10;Purcell's music: the complete anthems and services, the complete &#13;&#10;odes and welcome songs and the complete secular solo songs. Other &#13;&#10;current recording projects include a series of sacred music by &#13;&#10;Bach's contemporaries, and Vivaldi's sacred music. Two of the &#13;&#10;orchestra's greatest recent successes on compact disc and in the &#13;&#10;concert hall have been the massive Venetian reconstruction Lo &#13;&#10;Sposalizio and Boccherini's 1800 setting of the Stabat Mater.&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;----------------------------------------------------------------------&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Recorded in St. Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London,&#13;&#10;  on 9-14 July 2000&#13;&#10;Recording Engineer: Philip Hobbs&#13;&#10;Recording Producer: Ben Turner&#13;&#10;Front Design: Terry Shannon&#13;&#10;Booklet Editor: Tim Parry&#13;&#10;Executive Producers: Edward Perry, Simon Perry&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;Front Illustration:&#13;&#10;  Piazzetta and Bacino di San Marco in Venice (c.1735)&#13;&#10;  by Antonio Canaletto (1697-1768)&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;&#13;&#10;----------------------------------------------------------------------",
                "Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)"
            ],
            "title": [
                "Vivaldi, A. RV 608 Nisi Dominus [09] Amen.mp3"
            ],
            "track_number": [
                "30"
            ],
            "genre": [
                "Classical"
            ],
            "album": [
                "Sacred Music, Volume 6"
            ],
            "artist": [
                "Antonio Vivaldi"
            ]
        }
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    "playtime_string": "1:52"
}