Frogtoon Music

Miserere Mei by Gregorio Allegri

Artist Biography For Gregorio Allegri

Gregorio Allegri 1582–1652 Was An Italian Composer And Priest Of The Roman School Of Composers. He Mainly Lived In Rome And Died There. He Studied Music Under Giovanni Maria Nanini The Intimate Friend Of Palestrina. Being Intended For The Church He Obtained A Benefice In The Cathedral Of Fermo. Here He Composed A Large Number Of Motets And Other Sacred Music Which Being Brought To The Notice Of Pope Urban VIII Obtained For Him An Appointment In The Choir Of The Sistine Chapel At Rome. He Held This From December 1629 Until His Death. In Character He Was Regarded As Singularly Pure And Benevolent. Among The Musical Compositions Of Allegri Were Two Volumes Of Concerti For Five Voices Published In 1618 And 1619 Two Volumes Of Motets For Six Voices Published In 1621 An Edition Of Four-Part Sinfonia Five Masses Two Settings Of The Lamentations Of Jeremiah As Well As Numerous Motets Which Were Not Published In His Lifetime. He Was One Of The Earliest Composers For Stringed Instruments And Athanasius Kircher Has Given One Specimen Of This Class Of His Works In The Musurgia. Most Of Allegri's Published Music Is In The More Progressive Early Baroque Concertato Style Especially The Instrumental Music. However His Work For The Sistine Chapel Is Descended From The Palestrina Style And In Some Cases Strips Even This Refined Simple Style Of All Ornament. By Far The Most Celebrated Composition Of Allegri Is The Miserere Mei Deus A Setting Of Vulgate Psalm 50. It Is Written For Two Choirs The One Of Five And The Other Of Four Voices And Has Obtained Considerable Celebrity. One Of The Choirs Sings A Simple Fauxbordon Based On The Original Plainsong Chant For The Tonus Peregrinus The Other Choir Sings A Similar Fauxbordon With Pre-Existing Elaborations And The Use Of Cadenzas. The Miserere' Has For Many Years Been Sung Annually During Holy Week In The Sistine Chapel. Many Have Cited This Work As An Example Of The Stile Antico Or Prima Pratica. However Its Constant Use Of The Dominant Seventh Chord And Its Emphasis On Polychoral Techniques Certainly Put It Out Of The Range Of "prima Pratica". A More Accurate Comparison Would Be To The Works Of Giovanni Gabrieli. The Miserere Is One Of The Most Often-Recorded Examples Of Late Renaissance Music Although It Was Actually Written During The Chronological Confines Of The Baroque Era In This Regard It Is Representative Of The Music Of The Roman School Of Composers Who Were Stylistically Conservative. The Work Acquired A Considerable Reputation For Mystery And Inaccessibility Between The Time Of Its Composition And The Era Of Modern Recording The Vatican Wanting To Preserve Its Aura Of Mystery Forbade Copies Fortunately They Were Not Prepared For A Special Visit In 1770 From A 14-Year-Old Mozart Who On A Visit To Rome With His Father Heard It But Twice And Transcribed It Faithfully From Memory Thus Creating The First "bootleg" Copy. In 1771 Mozart's Copy Was Procured And Published In England By The Famous Traveler And Music Historian Dr. Burney. However Burney's Edition Does Not Show The Ornamentation For Which The Work Was Famous And The Music As It Is Performed Now Is The Result Of A Strange Copyist's Error In The 1880s. The Curious 'trucker's Gear Change' From G Minor To C Minor Is Because The Second Half Of The Verse Is The Same As The First Half But Transposed Up A Fourth. The Original Never Had A Top C. The Entire Music Performed At Rome In Holy Week Allegri's Miserere Included Has Been Issued At Leipzig By Breitkopf And Härtel. Interesting Accounts Of The Impression Produced By The Performance At Rome May Be Found In The First Volume Of Felix Mendelssohn's Letters And In Miss Taylor's Letters From Italy.

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Miserere mei

Miserere Mei - Gregorio Allegri One Of The Most Famous Choral Pieces Ever Composed In The Early C17th Especially For Performance Every Maundy Thursday During Holy Week In St. Peter's Cathedral Rome. The Copies Of The Music Were Closely Guarded And The Piece Wasn't Formally Published And Remained The Solo Property Of St Peter's. However Apparently Mozart As A Teenager Heard The Piece Performed And Was So Moved By It That As Soon As He Came Away From The Service After Hearing It He Wrote It Down Having Heard It Just The Once And That Is How The Piece Came Into The Public Domain. The Piece Has Undergone Many Transformations From Its Original Manuscript And Is Renowned For The Top Cs In The Soprano/treble 1 Part In The Solo Verses Six In Total . This Recording By The Oxford Camerata A Mixed Adult Choir Is A Performance Of What Has Become The Conventional Version Of The Piece And Is Lovely. The Words Are From Psalm 51 In Latin .

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