Vatican City, 29 September 2015 (VIS) –
This morning in the Holy See Press Office a conference was held to
present the music CD “Cantate Domino. The Sistine Chapel and the
music of Popes”, produced by Deutsche Grammophon. The speakers were
Archbishop Georg Ganswein, prefect of the Papal Household; Msgr.
Massimo Palombella, S.D.B., director of the Pontifical Sistine Chapel
Choir; Mark Wilkinson, president of Deutsche Grammophon; and Mirko
Gratton, director of the classical music section of Universal Italia.
“The Pontifical Musical Choir, also
known as the Sistine Chapel Choir, is among the oldest choral
institutions in the world and has the unique characteristic of being
the Pope's choir”, explained Archbishop Ganswein. This
characteristic makes it part of the life of the “Pope's Home” and
places the Pontifical Sistine Chapel Choir within the structure of
the Prefecture of the Papal Household, and gives it the specific task
of being an entity whose service is entirely devoted to the Pontiff.
“The Prefecture is the point of reference for the Choir in terms of
its artistic, administrative and disciplinary management. It is a
composite and structured entity made up of 20 adult singers regularly
employed by the Holy See, with the addition of 20 pueri cantores who
attend the private elementary school annexed to the Choir. The
release of a musical CD under the prestigious Deutsche Grammaphon
label is an unprecedented event in the history of the Pontifical
Musical Choir, and attests to the quality and professionalism that
this Institution has achieved, thanks to its serious and diligent
work under the guidance of Maestro Massimo Palombella”.
The album, released on 25 September,
includes Renaissance music written for the Sistine Chapel Choir by
Palestrina, Lassus and Victoria. There are also two pieces of
Gregorian chant, alongside world premiere recordings of the original
version of Allegri’s fabled Miserere (Sistine Codex of 1661) and a
Nunc dimittis attributed to Palestrina which is still used during
papal celebrations. Cantate Domino offers listeners the chance to
hear these pieces as the composers intended – in Latin and in the
surroundings for which they were originally written. In order to
capture the magic, mystery and beauty of the music in such unique
surroundings, Deutsche Grammophon set up a specially constructed
studio within the Chapel. The mixing desk was set up in an
ante-chamber, next to the “Sala del Pianto” (where the newly
elected pontiff first dresses in the papal vestments).
“The Sistine Chapel was consecrated
in 1483, and since then it has been home, without interruption, of
the Pontifical Musical Choir”, explained Msgr. Palombella. “In
recent years, after intense and specific study of Renaissance
religious music and its aesthetic importance, we have been able to
undertake an interesting and significant recording. My hope is that
these musical masterpieces will reach millions of people throughout
the world, bringing them into contact with the historical culture and
profound spirituality of the Catholic Church”.
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