While Vivaldi’s only setting of the Magnificat may not have the enduring impact and ingeniously resourceful economy of Bach’s better-known D major version, it’s full of terrific and memorable music–including a nifty unison Deposuit potentes and irresistibly catchy Sicut locutus est–that bears far more respect than today’s choruses acknowledge. The Credo RV 591 won’t leave anyone napping when confronted with its furiously rushing opening and closing expositions–and this often-interminable section of the mass passes pleasantly and painlessly with some remarkably varied and sensitively scored Et incarnatus est and Crucifixus passages. The first movement of the Kyrie RV 587 for double choir and two orchestras sounds more like Mozart of the Requiem than a creation from nearly 70 years earlier, and its opening, wildly meandering, richly scored chord progression seems as if it never will settle on a home key (which eventually turns out to be G minor). Well, here is a recording that not only may restore your enthusiasm for the Gloria (which really is a fine if insanely over-done piece) but also acknowledges a few other sacred items in the Vivaldi catalog that justly deserve attention. Perhaps you’ve heard Vivaldi’s unrelentingly popular Gloria just about ten too many times and wonder why no one focuses on the composer’s dozens of other vocal and choral works.
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