It is the Gloria of course, which grabs the headlines 
          on the front of the CD. It is Vivaldi’s best-known piece of church music. 
          The Gloria falls into eleven sections of similarly short length with 
          attractive and arresting ideas, which are easy to remember. The work 
          as a whole is not at all difficult for any decent amateur choir. There 
          are also solo sections like the ‘Domine Deus, Rex Coelestis’ and duets 
          like the ‘Laudamus te’ sung here with sheer delight by the two named 
          sopranos. The ‘Domine Deus filius patris’ features the wonderfully expressive 
          Michael Chance. Most choral societies will have tackled the piece and 
          collectors and general music lovers will want a version at home. So 
          is this a good choice? 
        
 
        
Well it all depends on whether you like boys on the 
          top part or women or if you like original instruments as you have here. 
          If you are not at all bothered then perhaps the excellent Naxos version 
          performed by the Schola Cantorum of Oxford and the Northern Chamber 
          Orchestra (8.550767) coupled with the wonderful ‘Beatus Vir’ is for 
          you, after all why pay full price, unless of course this particular 
          coupling appeals to you. The Naxos version follows the standard edition 
          - the one made by Casella for Ricordi. Its good to know here that the 
          version used is a more recent one by Paul Everett for O.U.P. It is worth 
          noting that almost every movement has at least a few bars alteration 
          from the Ricordi version. 
        
 
        
The Magnificat (an early work from about 1715) is another 
          multi-movement work, which should be better known. Of note is the way 
          Vivaldi involves the orchestra in depicting the scattering of the proud. 
          This is done with some frenzy. The opening chorus with its powerful 
          chords is "highly charged and chromatic" to quote the booklet 
          notes by Simon Heighes. This makes a dramatic contrast with the following 
          operatic soprano solo ‘Et exultavit’. This movement is for three soloists 
          including the fine voiced James Gilchrist but also has the choral interjections 
          - appropriately for the word ‘omnes’. 
        
 
        
Vivaldi’s ‘Dixit Dominus’ is the grandest of the settings 
          on this CD and dates from the period 1720-30. It is a very fine work. 
          Vivaldi gave up the priesthood, for whatever reason, to work at the 
          ‘ospedale de la pieta’ a girl’s convent school for whom he wrote music, 
          choral and instrumental. This work has real bass parts which not even 
          Vivaldi’s versatile girls could have managed. The movement ‘Dominus 
          ad dextris tuis’ is for tenor and bass. It is very imposingly sung by 
          James Gilchrist and a fine bass new to me, Jonathan Lemalu. The work 
          was written for the convent church of St. Lorenzo and is particularly 
          ambitious. The Handelian opening, full of strong fanfare ideas played 
          on trumpets, marks the piece off as being different. The homophonic 
          chordal writing which succeeds it is powerful. The trumpets return with 
          fanfares in no uncertain terms for the orchestral introduction to movement 
          7 ‘Judacabit in nationibus’ (He shall judge the heathen). Did Vivaldi 
          really expect trumpet glissandi? The trumpets appear again for the Gloria. 
        
 
        
In contrast the following aria ‘De Torrente in via 
          bibiet’ (He shall drink of the brook in the way) flows with triplets 
          in mouth-watering sequences. Sarah Fox here seems ideal deploying perfect 
          control in the long phrases and sensitive to the ensemble in general. 
          There is much in this work to captivate and interest. Its performance 
          will never disappoint, and EMI have captured the difficult college acoustic 
          without detriment to the music, but enabling you to sense the building; 
          something which they did not so successfully achieve in recordings there 
          twenty years ago. 
        
 
        
        
Gary Higginson