Benedetto MARCELLO (1686 - 1739)
Psalms
Psalm 11: In the Lord my God I put my trust [9:07]
Psalm 32: Blessed is he whose wickedness is forgiven [17:06]
Sonata for recorder and bc in F, op. 2,12: ciaccona* [4:16]
Psalm 50: The Lord Jehovah, even the most mighty God, hath spoken
[16:01]
Psalm 46: God is our refuge and our strength [9:00]
Canon Triplex: In omnem terram exivit sonus eorum [4:25]
Voces8; Les Inventions (Andrea Haines, Emily Dickens (soprano), Barnaby
Smith, Christopher Wardle (alto), Charles MacDougall, Robert Mingay Smith
(tenor), Paul Smith, Dingle Yandell (bass), Reinhild Waldeck (recorder*,
harp), Mark Dupere (cello), Thomas de Pierrefeu (violone), Etienne Galletier
(theorbo), Patrick Ayrton (organ))/Barnaby Smith, Patrick Ayrton
rec. 13-17 August 2012, Eglise Notre-Dame, Herment, France. DDD
Texts included
SIGNUM CLASSICS SIGCD391 [59:57]
The name of Benedetto Marcello doesn't appear all that often on
concert programmes. He is almost completely overshadowed by his contemporary
and compatriot Antonio Vivaldi. There was a time that it was the other way
around. In 1841, when Vivaldi's music had long sunk into oblivion, a
complete edition of Marcello's collection of 50 Psalm settings, with
the title
Estro poetico armonico, was published in Paris. In that
edition the basso continuo part had been replaced by a piano accompaniment.
This was a token of the music world's great admiration for these
compositions which lasted from the years of the original publication
(1724-1726), until well into the 19th century.
Benedetto Marcello was born into an aristocratic family, his father being
both a violinist and a politician; he was a senator in the Venetian
government. His mother was an artist and a poet. It is perhaps under her
influence that Benedetto valued poetic use of words very highly. Like his
father Benedetto was active in public life, as a lawyer and administrator.
His aristocratic roots prevented him from being active as a professional
musician and composer but he presented himself as a
nobile
dilettante. It seems there was a strong rivalry between Benedetto and
his older brother Alessandro, who has become best known for his oboe
concerto. According to one story Alessandro didn't think very highly
of his brother's musical skills. The success of the latter's
collection of Psalms proved him wrong.
The name of the collection is interesting as this was also the title of a
collection of concertos by Vivaldi which he had published as his op. 3 in
Amsterdam in 1711. It has been suggested that Marcello's title could
have been intended as a taunt in Vivaldi's direction. It may have
been his way of indicating what he thought was lacking in Vivaldi's
music: poetry. Marcello himself was praised for "strength and
regularity of design", and "noble simplicity". This
simplicity was a feature associated with 'early music',
meaning the music of the 16th century and early 17th century, in which
Marcello was strongly interested. In a way one can see him as an early
representative of what would become the standard in the time of Giuseppe
Tartini. Tartini was also very critical of Vivaldi's music,
especially his compositions for his own instrument, the violin.
Marcello's criticism was particularly directed towards the music for
the stage. In 1720 he published a treatise under the title
Il teatro
alla moda in which he dealt with the bad habits prevalent in the
theatre at the time. He wanted to reform the style of singing and clear away
exaggerated ornamentation.
This preference for naturalness comes clearly to the fore in his
Estro
poetico armonico and explains why these Psalms remained popular
throughout the 18th century and beyond. They were performed across Europe,
often in translations, including Swedish, Russian and French. They were also
translated into English, and that brings us to the present disc. The four
Psalms selected for this recording are sung to an English text. In 1757
Charles Avison, a major figure in English music life of the mid-18th century
and a lifelong admirer of Italian music, published the whole collection in
an English translation, in cooperation with his colleague John Garth. This
must have been a major undertaking. Marcello didn't make use of the
Latin text of the Vulgata, but rather an Italian paraphrase by the poet
Girolamo Ascanio Giustiniani. As in his settings Marcello aimed at a close
connection between text and music, it was of the utmost importance to create
a translation which would observe the way Marcello expressed the text in his
music. Whether Avison's translations fully succeed here is hard to
say as I don't know the original versions. It is a great shame that -
as far as I know - the collection has never been recorded complete.
What this disc does reveal, though, is that Marcello's music is
indeed distinctive and different from what was common at the time. Forget
the opera of those days, or the motets by Vivaldi and his large-scale
settings of the Gloria or the Magnificat. This is different. These Psalms
have no clear pattern. There are elements of the old-fashioned motet - the
symbol of the
stile antico - but also of aria, arioso and
recitative. Especially in the long Psalm 50 we find many recitatives, mostly
sung by the bass, acting as the
vox Dei, singing the words spoken
by God. There is some text repetition, but there are no dacapos. It is
clear, even in these English translations, that Marcello was very aware of
the meaning of the text. There are several episodes where the text is
vividly depicted. In Psalm 50, for instance, the words "A mighty
tempest shall rage around him", and in Psalm 46 "the mountains are
shaken by the tempest of the same". The opening piece, a setting of
Psalm 11, begins with an eloquent musical expression of the text: "In
the Lord I put my trust: how say ye to my soul, as a bird tou your
mountains, swiftly flee; and escape the secret snare that is laid for thy
destruction?" Melodically and harmonically this music is probably
something one has to get used to as it is so different from what one may
expect.
This disc underlines the quality of Marcello's compositions, and
should raise interest in his
Estro poetico armonico. A complete
recording of the original Italian version is long overdue. This recording
attests to the popularity of Marcello's Psalms and also sheds light
on an interesting and hardly-known aspect of English music life in the
mid-18th century. The performances are little short of ideal. I have given
an enthusiastic welcome to Voces8's recording of pieces from the
large oeuvre of Purcell, and the qualities of the ensemble's singing
come to the fore here as well. That said, I am not always completely
satisfied with the solo contributions of the individual singers. Barnaby
Smith is outstanding, but I am less enthusiastic about the (short)
interventions of Charles MacDougall, although that may largely be a matter
of taste. Dingle Yandell is quite expressive in Psalm 50, but sometimes he
uses a little too much vibrato.
Marcello's collection ends with the
Canon triplex,
translated: "Infinite six voice triple canon in lower fifth". The
text - Psalm 19 vs 5 - fits the 'infinite' character:
"Their sound has gone out to the entire world, and their words have
gone to the ends of the circle of the earth". It is a short polyphonic
masterpiece which brings a most fascinating and compelling disc to a
close.
Johan van Veen
www.musica-dei-donum.org
twitter.com/johanvanveen