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Antonio Vivaldi: Laetatus sum RV 827: Chœur Mixte et Ensemble

Ed. critica di Michael Talbot

COMPOSITEUR: Antonio Vivaldi
TYPE DE PRODUIT: Pratique vocale pour chœurs
ÉDITEUR: Ricordi
This single-movement setting of the Vesper psalm Laetatus sum was discovered by Michael Talbot in the spring of 2017 among the online collection of digitized scores of sacred music held by the SLUB in Dresden. Four works byVivaldi deliberately misattributed to Baldassare Galuppi by the Venetian
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Détails
Compositeur Antonio Vivaldi
Description Instrument Group Choeur Mixte
Instrumentation Chœur Mixte et Ensemble
Voix SATB
Instrumentation Mixed Choir [SATB], Strings and Continuo
Type de produit Pratique vocale pour chœurs
Description Product Type Conducteur
Collection UMPC Critical Editions
Niveau de difficulté INTERMEDIATE
Éditeur Ricordi
Année de publication 2017
Nombre de Pages 48
ISBN 9788881920341
ISMN 9790041914497
Edition Number PR 00144900
PR 00144900
Description
This single-movement setting of the Vesper psalm Laetatus sum was discovered by Michael Talbot in the spring of 2017 among the online collection of digitized scores of sacred music held by the SLUB in Dresden. Four works byVivaldi deliberately misattributed to Baldassare Galuppi by the Venetian copyist Iseppo Baldan had already been uncovered in the previous decades, and it was during anexploratory examination of scores sharing a paper type andcopyist (Baldan himself) with them that this fifth such work came to light. Vivaldi's single movement pieno settings (for choir alone without soloists) form an important subset of his sacred vocal music, and this new setting isthe most elaborate and expansive of any of them. It features effective musical contrasts, and its many felicitous examples of word-painting show what a complete master of vocal composition he had become by the 1730s, the decadefrom which this setting clearly originates. As usual in Vivaldi's choral compositions the ever-changing relationship between the vocal and instrumental components constantly fascinates, as each in turn captures the listener'sattention. This previously unknown Laetatus sum promises to become a much-performed work.
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