The Italian classical CD retailer and record company
have a thriving classical catalogue although much of it is pre-20
th century.
They were obliging enough to make review copies available of
some of their discs including two separate uniformly designed
and packaged discs: Respighi’s
Christus (see
review - BDI125) and
Rota’s
Mysterium, a major piece for
soloists, choir include children’s choir and full orchestra.
While the Respighi was a recording from 1991 the Rota is
from 1962. The analogue sound as conveyed here has had its hiss
tamed by Musica Numeris of Brussels who digitally restored and
remastered the iron oxide tape. The ambience achieved is rich
and resonantly sonorous without much in the way of distortion
except on the ringing singing of the bass Ugo Trama in Part III
and later when, in the same part, when the choir is going at
full tilt. This is noticeable but only transient. Oddly enough
the recording avoids the tendency occasionally evident in BDI125
for the engineers to pull back on the controls in the louder
passages.
The sung text is there in Latin, Italian and English although
not in side-by-side format.
The helpful liner notes are by Fernando-Vittorino Joannes.
The music is brooding, passionately devotional, regretfully
nostalgic, romantic, blazing and gritty, rhythmically inventive,
ringing with fervent sincerity and even operatic. Rota’s gift
for illustration is uncannily vivid fore example when he is portraying
the scattering of the grain at the start of Part VI while at
the same time doffing his hat to Rossini. Another fingerprint
is his penchant for little ostinato cells – especially the gentle
ticking of time in Part VII. As you would expect, the writing
is not at all avant-garde. The parallels are rather with Walton
in his
Te Deum and
Gloria and Verdi’s
Requiem (tr.
7 03:22) – somewhere between the two styles with perhaps a dash
of Orff. The recording exudes fully commitment and the finale
in particular radiates logic and a sense of spiritual conviction.
Rob Barnett