Sacco, born in the 
                  province of Foggia in 1572, is one of those Italian polyphonists 
                  whose hold on the repertoire is tenuous. The hold rests entirely 
                  on a single collection of sacred music, known to exist in three 
                  copies, which forms the basis of this disc’s reconstruction 
                  of a Marian liturgy.
                Sacco, also known as Sacchi, held important 
                  positions in the South, journeyed north to Rome to study at 
                  Palestrina’s school – though it’s not definitively known if 
                  he was a personal pupil of Palestrina’s. He eventually returned 
                  to Cerignola in Foggia. This 1607 collection was published when 
                  he was maestro di cappella at the cathedral of San Giacomo in 
                  Viterbo. It’s notable for its use of a double choir with thorough 
                  bass. Of more interest, maybe to the generalist, is the unaffected 
                  and clear compositional style. It’s one that seems to owe a 
                  clear debt to Palestrina but which manages to reserve a kind 
                  of personal integrity of expression. It can’t perhaps be argued 
                  that he attained the powerful command of other contemporaries 
                  of the second generation of the Roman school – not least because 
                  the Roman Polychoral School was at its blazing summit at around 
                  this time. However Sacco’s (reconstructed) liturgy makes strong 
                  appeals.
                There’s certainly 
                  powerfully impressive dignity in his setting of the Dialogus. 
                  Polychoral mastery is in evidence throughout, and there’s no 
                  straining for extraneous effect. There also technical prowess 
                  in imitative phraseology. His sheer delicacy of setting is best 
                  heard in the lovely Gloria of the 1607 Missa. And the accelerandi 
                  and slowings down in the Litaniae Laurentanae are evidence 
                  of a theatrical ear for movement and expressive effect. He certainly 
                  ensures that important textual matter is highlit in the most 
                  direct and yet unsimplistic way. The emotive heart of the Missa 
                  setting is the Credo – the Et incarnatus est is particularly 
                  moving – but the power of Sacco’s poignancy is everywhere evident.
                Three moments of 
                  cantus planus are here as well – the Graduale, Offertorium 
                  and Communio. And for further variety we also have some organ 
                  works by Paolo Quagliati (c.1555-1628). He was also part of 
                  the migratory passage northwards, from Venice to Rome, where 
                  he died. He was a technician of high quality if these few brief 
                  examples are representative of his instrumental writing. It 
                  would be good to hear more of his choral music.
                These are groundbreaking 
                  performances then. It’s becoming increasingly fashionable to 
                  build CD programmes around reconstructed and newly edited Marian 
                  masses but this one will be new to all but the most specialised 
                  of scholars. The performances are warmly sympathetic, the voices 
                  youthful and well blended, the direction athletic when necessary. 
                  The recorded sound captures them well, as it does the organ. 
                  Full texts and notes.
                Jonathan Woolf  
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