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Allegri Miserere - The Sixteen 25th Anniversary Edition
 
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Allegri Miserere - The Sixteen 25th Anniversary Edition

Allegri (Composer), Palestrina (Composer), Harry Christophers (Conductor), The Sixteen (Performer)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews) More about this product

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Product Details

  • Performer: The Sixteen
  • Conductor: Harry Christophers
  • Composer: Allegri, Palestrina
  • Audio CD (June 1, 2003)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: CORO
  • ASIN: B00008ZZ27
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #98,867 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

 
1. Antonio LOTTI: Crucifixus
2. Giovanni Pierluigi da PALESTRINA: Stabat Mater Dolorosa
3. Gregorio ALLEGRI: Miserere
4. Giovanni Pierluigi da PALESTRINA: Missa Papae Marcelli

On this CD:
  1. Crucifixus a 8 Voix
    Composed by Antonio Lotti
    with The Sixteen
    Conducted by Harry Christophers

  2. Stabat mater, motet for 8 voices
    Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
    with The Sixteen
    Conducted by Harry Christophers

  3. Miserere mei Deus (Psalm 51), motet for chorus
    Composed by Gregorio Allegri
    with The Sixteen
    Conducted by Harry Christophers

  4. Missa Papae Marcelli, for 6 voices
    Composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
    with The Sixteen
    Conducted by Harry Christophers


Editorial Reviews

The Guardian, 03,15,2003

"Christophers draws brilliant performances from his singers, both technically assured and vividly impassioned."-


Product Description

In 2004, Harry Christophers and The Sixteen will celebrate 25 years of music making. To commemorate this milestone, CORO has released a handsome, slip-case edition of their original recordings. The haunting tones of Allegri's Miserere are unique and instantly recognizable even to those who know little sacred choral music, and features an other-worldly treble solo. No connoisseur of the choral arts will want to be without this recording of Palestrina's Missa Papae Marcelli. Along with his Stabat Mater it combines exquisite contrapuntal poise with a translucent setting of the words, whereby music and text complement each other to the detriment of neither. The chromaticism and blossoming cadences of Lotti's eight part Crucifixus have made it a work loved by both choirs and listeners.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THRESHOLD OF PARADISE, September 2, 2008
By DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Allegri's Miserere is given the top billing on this disc, perhaps because of some celebrated special effects, explained in the liner notes, that it contains. The first track is devoted to a sombre and beautiful Crucifixus (from the Nicene Creed) by one Lotti, an older contemporary of Bach. Admirable and compelling, both of these, but what I bought this disc for was the two items by Palestrina, his Stabat Mater and the celestial Missa Papae Marcelli.

It is not just the quality of the early music specialists these days but the sheer profusion of them that continues to astonish me. I looked through the list of singers (18, not 16) and while I did not recognise most of the names offhand that may simply be because I did not investigate my large record collection, and I certainly did spot the name of a certain Mark Padmore among the tenors. The top parts are taken by sopranos, not trebles, all the altos are male, and the four soloists in the Allegri are also members of the choir.

To me, the 16th century polyphonists are not some recondite category of music that I have come to know in a spirit of antiquarianism. My early education made me familiar with Palestrina, Victoria and others of the period before I knew Bach Beethoven and Brahms, and that surely has to be the right sequence simply because it is the chronological and historical sequence. I have no mental reconfiguring to do before I listen to Palestrina because I have long known, and indeed sung in, the two works here. If they need `selling' to anyone, the best I can do is to state baldly that these performances are magnificent and the music itself is sublime beyond sublimity. This performance of the Mass in particular even ousts my treasured account from Willcocks in being at least as well sung and benefiting from more modern recording. Everything here is `quality'. To compliment a choir on its infallible intonation is not like congratulating an author on his spelling, it is a higher sort of achievement and one that cannot be taken for granted even nowadays and even from the most distinguished performers. Here it is utterly beyond question, and I was overawed by the breath-control that these vocalists, to a man and a woman, exhibited in the long final notes of the various pieces. All this is at the service of a musical sense that is instinct with belief and commitment as well as being stylistically impeccable. Nothing is exaggerated, but I sense a fervour in this singing that would not be out of place in the most `expressive' later music. The recording is just about ideal too, clear without either dryness or excessive resonance, reproducing with fidelity the superb vocal tone.

Nothing Allegri can do matches the heavenly serenity of the Missa Papae Marcelli, but the performance, as you might expect, is to the same standard, and so is that of Lotti's very fine Crucifixus. Harry Christophers contributes a short preface, and the main liner note, by Ivan Moody, provides some informative background. It may be that a little comment of my own on the texts respectively of the Stabat Mater and the Miserere will be helpful, because these are not the brightest jewels of the production.

The text of the Stabat Mater that Palestrina used is not the one I am most familiar with, the text set by Verdi for one. Details of the divergences need not concern us now, but for the odd fact that in two instances the Sixteen sing the other version and not what you will find printed here. I shall point these out at the places where they occur, in the course of correcting misprints in the Latin

. `Contristantem': read `contristatam'
. `Per tansivit': read `pertransivit'
. `Quis Christi': delete `Quis'
. `Me sentire vim doloris,': the comma should either be removed or come after `fac' in the next line
. `Fac me vere tecum flere': the other version `Fac me tecum pie flere' meaning `Make me weep devoutly with you' is what is sung
. `con dolore': read `condolere'
. `Ob amorem Filii': the other version `Et cruore Filii' meaning `And with the blood of your Son' is what is sung
. `custodire': read `custodiri'

There are a few misprints in the Latin of the Miserere as well, and more seriously there is a fair little sprinkling of mistranslations in the English. I shall mention only the outright errors and not those cases where the translation allows itself some latitude

. `miserationem': read `miserationum'
. `Ecce enim...manifestasti mihi': the translation is completely wrong. Read `For lo, thou hast loved truth: thou hast revealed to me those things in thy wisdom that are uncertain and hidden.'
. `mudabor': read `mundabor'
. `the bones which thou hast broken': read `my bones that were cast down'
. `invisceribus': read `in visceribus'
. `proiecias': read `proicias'
. `free spirit': read `lordly spirit'
. `sanquinibus': read `sanguinibus'
. `dedessem': read `dedissem'
. `build thou the walls of Jerusalem': read `so that the walls of Jerusalem may be built'
. `imponenet': read `imponent'

It is worth understanding what we are listening to, especially when what we are listening to is as transcendentally good as we find it here.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Taste of Heaven, September 25, 2007
I got into my car, turned the ignition, and the radio was already tuned to Minnesota Public Radio. Allegri's Miserere, performed by The Sixteen was playing. I couldn't move until it was over. It was like being transported to a different realm. I paid attention to the announcer's description of the piece afterward, and lost no time in tracking it down on the Internet. The Miserere was only ever sung in the Sistine Chapel, its composer being a chorister there. If you have any taste at all for sacred choral music, you won't be disappointed!
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BEATS FOOTBALL, May 18, 2007
There I was sitting in the car - listening to the football: Derby V Southampton. Saints were winning - thank you God. I was also waiting for my two lads who were in a boxing session.

I turned the radio to Classic FM - and there is was: The Sixteen Miserere. I was mesmorised....spell - bound by the interconnecting harmonies and the truly inspirational melodies. I was hooked and listened to the whole piece.

I eventually turned back to the Football. We lost on penalties. But I had discovered a musical phenomenon and bought the CD.

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