Claudio Monteverdi - Vespro della Beata Vergine 1610 - La Capella Reial de Catalunya - Coro del Centro Musica Antica di Padova - Jordi Savall | 2 x SACD rip to iso (4.63 GB) | 2ch & Mch Hybrid | DR12 | Classical https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5rQWBGEyyE This is a Super Audio remastering of Savall’s 1988 recording (13:4), made in the ducal basilica of Santa Barbara in Mantua. Like Harry Christophers eight months earlier (12:6), Savall recast the work as a Vespers of St. Barbara, the patron of the basilica, on the assumption that it might have been performed there before publication. This was accomplished chiefly by using six chant antiphons for the feast that was proper to the basilica, even though they fitted the modes of the psalms no better than any Marian feast does (a point that I failed to grasp in the original review). Christophers went further, changing the litany to “Santa Barbara, ora pro nobis” and radically rearranging the order of the pieces, in the process completing a liturgical reconstruction of sorts. But Savall’s is the only recording of the masterpiece recorded in that basilica (John Eliot Gardiner did record it at St. Mark’s in Venice, 14:5). Even though it was recorded with a pair of omnidirectional microphones, it has been remastered for Super Audio surround sound, and the result is spectacular. The producer intended to capture the acoustics of the basilica that Monteverdi was familiar with. Savall thinks he might have first performed the work there, suggesting an occasion on March 25, 1610, without offering any evidence for the idea. Scholars have suggested a couple of other occasions that prove to be impossible on closer examination. The original review indicated that this version had a good claim to the top of the heap, though my assumption that the antiphons for St. Barbara were modally correct influenced that choice. There have been over 20 recordings since then, and Masaaki Suzuki (25:2) and Rinaldo Alessandrini (28:4) are among the best, the latter among the few recordings that adopts a chamber style without choral voices. Both of these stick to the publication of 1610 with both Magnificats, transposing the two chiavette movements but adding nothing. It is tempting to include John Eliot Gardiner (14:5; DVD in 27:1) in a short list, but especially on DVD his effort to dramatize Vespers is wrongheaded. The Mass is an action, with movement and gesture; Vespers and other hours of the Office are simply ritual prayer, marked by little more than standing and kneeling in place. Along with the other positive attributes, Savall’s version is good because it is so well sung. All the original notes are retained, and Savall adds another note dated 2007. The date of death of Monteverdi’s predecessor in Mantua, Giovanni Gastoldi, is still described as “shortly after” 1608, though he lived until 1622. The packaging is even more sumptuous than the original issue. This is still one of the recommendable recordings of this masterpiece. fanfarearchive.com There are more than one dozen recordings of Monteverdi's great masterpiece, the Vespers of 1610, a distinction reserved for very few works and composers from the late 16th and early 17th centuries. With this kind of attention, you'd think that this substantial work for choir, soloists, and instruments would be more easily accessible--but it is in fact a structurally complex and musically intricate compilation of hymns, antiphons, and psalms, concluding with a magnificent setting of the Magnificat. Most recordings can't seem to overcome the strategic and technical problems of presenting such a three-dimensional work on a recording. But this one is different: the music literally comes alive and grabs our attention. If you're in the market for Monteverdi's Vespers, look no further. This is the most dynamic, dramatic version on disc. customer David Vernier at amazon.com Tracks: Disc 1 1. Intonatio: Deus in adiutorium / Responsorium: Domine ad adiuvandum 2:12 2. Antiphona: Angelicam vitam 0:35 3. Psalmus 109: Dixit Dominus 8:35 4. Concerto: Nigra sum 3:27 5. Antiphona: In Dei orto sata 0:29 6. Psalmus 112: Laudate pueri 7:16 7. Concerto: Pulchra es 4:23 8. Antiphona: Paterni oblita amoris 0:27 9. Psalmus 121: Laetatus sum 8:17 10. Concerto: Duo Seraphim 5:23 11. Antiphona: In Sancte Trinitatis 0:29 12. Psalmus 126: Nisi Dominus 4:57 Total running time: 46:35 Disc 2 1. Concerto: Audi cœlum 7:44 2. Antiphona: Trinitate venerata 0:28 3. Psalmus 147: Lauda Jerusalem 5:09 4. Sonata sopra Sancta Maria 6:40 5. Hymnus: Ave maris stella 9:17 6. Antiphona: Hodie beata Barbara 1:13 7. Magnificat 18:39 Total running time: 49:08 Musicians: Montserrat Figueras & Maria Cristina Kiehr (soprano) Livio Piccoti & Paolo Costa (countertenor) Guy de Mey, Gian Paulo Fagotto & Gerd Türk (tenor) Pietro Spagnoli & Roberto Abondanza (bariton) Daniele Carnovich (bass) Coro del Centro Musica Antica di Padova, Schola Gregoriana, La Capella Reial conducted by Jordi Savall