Conductors like Rinaldo 
                Alessandrini have done a great deal 
                to put Italian music-making, particularly 
                Italian singing back on the map. For 
                many years one could pretty much rely 
                on any choral recording made in Italy 
                by Italians to be sub-standard. Such 
                is no longer the case, but regrettably 
                the improvements have not yet made it 
                to Genova, as these performances, interesting 
                as the repertoire might be, go to prove. 
              
 
              
Antonio Caldara was 
                greatly admired in his day, was a fluent 
                and prolific composer and was recognized 
                over a wide span of Europe, with even 
                J.S. Bach making use of his music for 
                services in Leipzig. This collection 
                of sacred choral and instrumental music 
                is somewhat hit and miss in quality, 
                and is sadly done in by the almost universal 
                inferiority of the soloists. 
              
 
              
Opening and instrumental 
                sinfonia, a meditation on the death 
                and burial of Christ, the disc gets 
                off to a hopeful start, at least in 
                terms of the quality of the music. There 
                is much drama in the score and the colorful 
                harmony, tense with chains of suspensions 
                is gripping. Unfortunately, the "Il 
                Cimento" orchestra has not yet 
                learned to play baroque strings consistently 
                in tune, and this flaw very quickly 
                detracts from the music’s enjoyment. 
              
 
              
The mass is rather 
                typical of the sort of utilitarian baroque 
                mass settings that seemed to flow from 
                composers’ pens like water in those 
                days. It is elongated by the common 
                practice of setting the longer Gloria 
                and Credo in strings of shorter, independent 
                movements instead of making them through-composed 
                as was the practice in the renaissance. 
                Before the final Dona nobis pacem, 
                Caldara seems to be doing a bit of note 
                spinning, and the ideas are few. Fond 
                of fugal writing, he tends to get carried 
                away with the length of things. 
              
 
              
The disc concludes 
                with a nice little set of motets for 
                two and three solo voices with continuo. 
                These show a good deal more invention, 
                perhaps because the texts are more diverse 
                and lend themselves to more colorful 
                settings. 
              
 
              
This disc had potential 
                to be quite a find. Regrettably, however, 
                the soloists bring the enjoyment of 
                the performances to a crashing halt. 
                The sopranos in particular simply do 
                not have a pleasant tone between them. 
                Of late I have been railing against 
                bad counter-tenors, and this one gets 
                added to my list of singers who should 
                go back to the baritone range. 
              
 
              
The choral singing 
                is out of balance and there is practically 
                no unity of tone. In particular the 
                altos have a strident and abrasive sound 
                that gets into your face pretty quickly 
                and never leaves. 
              
 
              
I am beginning to think 
                that it is simply too easy to make a 
                recording these days. Although there 
                are many well meaning performers and 
                ensembles, far too many discs of what 
                could be very interesting music are 
                derailed by consistently inferior performances. 
                Sadly, that is the case here. Pass on 
                this one. Wait for the Dutch to do it 
                right! 
              
 
              
              
Kevin Sutton