Magnificat (Vivaldi)
made several versions of his G minor setting of the Magnificat canticle. He scored his best known version, RV 610, for vocal soloists, four-part choir, oboes and string orchestra, which also exists in a version for two groups of performers. He based these versions on an earlier setting for voices and strings only. His ultimate version, in which some choral and ensemble movements are replaced by five arias, to be sung a cappella by girls from the Ospedale della Pietà orphanage, was catalogued as RV 611. The concise work is well suited for use in vesper services.
Versions
History
Vivaldi worked in Venice as a priest and director of music at an orphanage for girls, Ospedale della Pietà, and left a substantial amount of sacred music.He composed settings of the Magnificat canticle, a regular part of vesper services. Musicologists differ in dating the works, for example before 1717 or in 1719. According to the musicologist Michael Talbot, Vivaldi wrote the earliest version in G minor for the orphanage c. 1715, and copied it for a Cistercian monastery of Osek soon afterwards. He revised it in the 1720s, making the tenor and bass parts more suitable to male voices, and adding two oboes, which he used prominently as obbligato instruments in an expanded version of "Sicut locutus est". This version became known as RV 610. While Vivaldi assigned two choirs, with instructions in the choral movements to use one or the other or both, it remains monochoral music. Vivaldi wrote a later setting, RV 611, which retained the choral sections but replaced the three sections for solo voices by five more elaborate arias, in which individual girls from the orphanage could show off their skills. Their names were noted in the score.
Structure and scoring
Vivaldi structured the Magnificat, RV 610, in nine movements, eight for the text of the canticle and the conclusion for the doxology. Set in G minor, it is scored for two soprano soloists, alto and tenor soloists, SATB choir, violin I and II, viola, and basso continuo, such as cello and a keyboard instrument. The following table shows the title, voices, tempo marking, time, key and text source for the nine movements. A performance requires approximately 15 minutes. A performance of RV 611, with the elaborate arias, takes around 20 minutes.No. | Title | Voices | Tempo | Time | Key | Text source | Audio |
1 | Magnificat | SATB | Adagio | G minor | |||
2 | Et exultavit | Allegro | B-flat major | ||||
3 | Et misericordia | SATB | Andante molto | C minor | |||
4 | Fecit potentiam | SATB | Presto | 3/4 | A major | ||
5 | Deposuit potentes de sede | SATB | Allegro | 3/4 | G minor | ||
6 | Esurientes implevit bonis | Allegro | B-flat major | ||||
7 | Suscepit Israel | SATB | Largo | D minor | |||
8 | Sicut locutus est | SAB | Allegro ma poco | F major | |||
9 | Gloria patri | SATB | Largo | G minor | Doxology |