BBC Music Magazine

A rediscover­ed gem of the ‘Colossal Baroque’

Kate Bolton-porciatti thrills to the latest album from I Fagiolini, which casts vivid light on a 17th-century choral masterpiec­e

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Benevoli Missa Tu es Petrus et al

I Fagiolini, The City Musick/ Robert Hollingwor­th

CORO COR16201

58:00 mins

This revelatory project unveils the shadowy Franco-italian composer Orazio Benevoli – born in 1605 in Rome, the son of a French baker, he became choirmaste­r of the celebrated Cappella Giulia of St Peter’s in the mid-17th century. As this world premiere recording of his Mass Tu es Petrus amply demonstrat­es, Benevoli was a vital figure in forging the so-called ‘Colossal Baroque’ style, developed to fill the vast spaces of Roman basilicas with resplenden­t sound.

The Missa Tu es Petrus is a tour de force of the Catholic revival, sumptuousl­y scored for four choirs and intended to be performed in the new basilica of St Peter. The latter had been recently completed, hence the Mass’s dedication to the apostle Peter – the foundation ‘stone’ (‘petrus’) of both the musical and the architectu­ral edifices. While much has been made of the polychoral tradition in Baroque Venice, Benevoli’s work shows that Rome, too, boasted a similarly extravagan­t tradition of sacred music that exploits the contrasts and combinatio­ns of multiple choirs of voices and instrument­s, creating colossal blocks of sound.

The composer’s idiom looks both backwards and forwards, as sober stile antico polyphony (recalling Palestrina) gives way to ornate soloistic writing. Above all, the Tu es Petrus

Mass is a highly expressive work, with its evocative word painting, ‘angelic’ vocal lines and rhythmic vitality and variety. Recorded here in the round, with a battery of instrument­s enriching the vocal ensembles, the work engulfs the senses just as it must

have done in Benevoli’s day in the echoing spaces of St Peter’s.

I Fagiolini and the instrument­alists of The City Musick produce a multi-hued tapestry of sound, colouring each of the four choirs with different instrument­al timbres: choir one is a cappella, the other three are fleshed out, respective­ly, with cornett/ trombone, violin/bass violin and recorder/dulcian, so highlighti­ng the four different choirs with textural contrasts and a distinctly Roman chiaroscur­o. Ever responsive to the words and their liturgical context, director Robert Hollingwor­th and his singers find just the right equilibriu­m between balanced ensemble singing and a more highly charged soloistic delivery. Using one or two voices to a part (as seems to have been Roman practice in Benevoli’s day) ensures that the polychoral sound remains clean and transparen­t – yet it never lacks opulence. The instrument­al playing, expertly led by William Lyons, is controlled, stylish and beautifull­y integrated into the vocal ensemble.

Benevoli’s Mass is based on Palestrina’s venerable six-voice motet Tu es Petrus, a radiant and liquid performanc­e of which opens the recording.

The Mass movements are then interspers­ed and contrasted with works by Benevoli’s contempora­ry Bonifazio Graziani: four intimate motets scored variously for three to six solo voices and accompanie­d by a delicate continuo ensemble. Again in world premiere recordings, we hear Domine, ne in furore tuo,a sensuous confection redolent of Monteverdi, and Venite gentes, whose florid vocal melismas are exquisitel­y sung by the five soloists.

The honeyed Ad mensam dulcissimi and the fervent, six-part Justus ut palma bring this glorious disc to an ecstatic conclusion. PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

The polychoral sound is clean and transparen­t – yet it never lacks opulence

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 ?? ?? Extravagan­t sounds: I Fagiolini and Robert Hollingwor­th turn deserved attention to an overlooked master
Extravagan­t sounds: I Fagiolini and Robert Hollingwor­th turn deserved attention to an overlooked master

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