
Collegium 1704’s blithe performance conveys a radiant mood in the
opening strains of ‘Kyrie eleison’; the solo quartet’s plea for mercy
carries through to a shapely choral response adorned by four relaxed
trumpets. Hana Blažíková’s limpid singing produces a gorgeous dialogue
with a violin and oboe d’amore in ‘Benedictus’, and her duet with Kamila
Mazalová in ‘Domine Deus’ is a charming pastoral featuring two bubbling
flutes. Lucile Richardot’s rapt ‘Agnus Dei’ is accompanied gently by
delicate solo flute and pulsing strings. ‘Quoniam tu solus sanctus’ is a
fluid quartet that seems closer to Mozart than to Bach, not least on
account of its introductory ritornello juggling a trio of flutes and
violas on the one hand, and another trio of oboes and bassoon on the
other, while trumpets make surprisingly subtle interjections.
From the heartfelt piety of ‘Qui tollis peccata mundi’ to the
thrilling rising sequences at the climax of the Sanctus (‘Hosanna in
excelsis’), the choral singing is immaculate. The marginally more
compact Litaniae de Sancto Xaverio, also written for the 1729
festivities, has an unusually theatrical impact – especially when a pair
of horns let rip in the flamboyant quartet ‘Tuba resonans’, and when
the verses refer to the saint giving aid to the shipwrecked and
expelling demons in the fantastic chorus ‘Auxiliator naufragantium’. (David Vickers / Gramophone)
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