To the glory of St John
Paul II
GIUSEPPE PENNISI samples The Vatican's
recent festival of sacred music and art
recent festival of sacred music and art
Every year in October / November, a major festival of sacred music and art is
held in the Vatican and in some of the Holy Basilicas of Rome. This year the Festival
Internazionale di Musica e Arte Sacra (nine concerts between 28 October and 4
November 2015) was dedicated to St John
Paul II, at the tenth anniversary of his death. This important festival is mostly financed
through 'crowd funding', which is why it is compacted into a very few days,
even though it involves some six hundred artists, all of very high standard. This allows the many
sponsors from all over the world to visit Rome and enjoy the
whole festival. Tickets are free, but seats must be reserved on the website of the Pro Musica e Arte
Sacra Foundation.
The Weiner Philharmoniker was the 'orchestra in residence', offering a concert in the St Paul Basilica (Beethoven: Symphonies Nos 7 and
8) almost in competition with the
Beethoven cycle being played by the National
Academy of Santa Cecilia Orchestra with Antonio Pappano in the pit
(Accolades and Ovations, 8 November 2015). Other important groups, the Japanese IlluminArt Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, the German Montini-Chor and Ensemble Hans Berger, the Swedish St Jacobs Chamber Choir as well as
naturally the Coro della Cappella Musicale Pontificia Sistina and the International Orchestra
and Chorus of the Nations.
I attended three of the nine concerts. The main element was, once more, to amalgamate
'classical' and 'modern' or even 'contemporary music' — just as
in Pappano's Beethoven cycle. Indeed,
there is an Italian saying that 'classical music is always contemporary'.
This feature was clear from the first concert on 28
October. A 'spiritual' introduction was the Messe
solennelle en l'honneur de Sainte-Cécile for orchestra, chorus and soloists by Charles Gounod: it is an
1855 work which seems to anticipate Gounod's most famous opera Faust, especially in the tenor arias (Pierluigi Paulucci) such as
the Sanctus. After the introduction, the
Holy Service was held, celebrated by Cardinal Angelo Comastri and accompanied
by Hans Berger's Pater-Rupert-Mayer-Messe ('Mass of Father Rupert Mayer'), interpolated
during the Communion by an Orasho choral song in Latin by the Kakure Kirishitan —
the Christians hiding in Japan during the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries. The Hans Berger is a monumental late twentieth century work with
quite a few American echoes, whilst the Orasho is
Gregorian music as remembered by the Kakure Kirishitan. The fusion worked quite
well. The real coup de théâtre was the Japanese conductor of the long concert: Tomomi Nishimoto — a
slender but athletic lady dominating a huge number of performers — the Roma
Sinfonietta and three choruses.
1 November 2015 in St Mary Major Basilica was quite impressive, with, in
the first part, a confrontation between the Sistine Chapel Choir and St Jacobs Chamber Choir of Stockholm Cathedral. There was also a good
opportunity to listen again to Giovanni Bonato's Credo - winner of the 2014 Francesco Siciliani Prize (Extraordinary
Artistic Freedom, 24 September 2014). In the
final part, the two choruses sang together in various parts of
the Basilica, producing extraordinary stereophonic effects.
A scene from the 1 November 2015 concert in Santa Maria Majiore. Photo © 2015 Musacchio & Ianniello |
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