The
modern-day appreciation of Francesco Bartolomeo Conti takes a decisive
turn in the direction of his church music with this early
eighteenth-century composer’s Missa Sancti Pauli given an ideal
recording on Glossa by György Vashegyi, the Purcell Choir and Orfeo
Orchestra. Conti was a Florentine who worked for much of his career in
the Imperial Court in Vienna, generating much attention there – the
ever-observant JS Bach and Zelenka were both known to have been
attracted by his music. Curiously, it was liturgical works like this
1715 Missa Sancti Pauli which kept Conti’s name known until
near to the end of the nineteenth century rather than the operas,
oratorios and cantatas with which he delighted the Viennese Court and
which have hitherto been receiving the attention of artists and record
labels today.
If Conti’s church music is less
fledgling Classical than his dramatic fare, there is much in the way of
melodic tunefulness and concertato style – for both voices and
instruments – to combine with fugal-imitative writing reminiscent of the
stile antico. The work is a Credo Mass (both Mozart
and Beethoven were to write examples of this genre, with its rondolike
restatement of the word in the Credo section.
The
tone, control, presence and unity of the Purcell Choir have been amply
demonstrated already on Glossa in music of the French Baroque – Rameau
and Mondonville in particular – and the singers are given full
opportunity to shine in Conti’s mass – as are the orchestra, comprised
mainly of strings, and the vocal soloists, who include Adriána
Kalafszky, Péter Bárány, Zoltán Megyesi and Thomas Dolié. Bárány and
Megyesi are also soloists in two additional works: the motet, Fastos caeli audite and the aria Pie Jesu, ad te refugio.
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