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Mateo Romero (ca. 1575-1647): Officium Defunctorum
et Missa pro Defunctis
Pedro Ruimonte (1565-1627): Absolutiones
Sebastián López de Velasco (1584-1659): Motectum
The commemoration of the fourth centenary of the publication of
Don Quixote in 2005 is the best occasion to pay homage, not
only to the great genius of Spanish literature, Miguel de Cervantes,
but to other leading artistic and cultural figures of the Golden
Age. Mateo Romero (ca. 1575-1647), music master of the Chapel Royal
from 1598 to 1633 (during the reigns of Philip III and Philip IV)
was the most important composer at the Spanish court around 1616,
the year of Cervantes's death.
The rediscovery of his eight-part Missa pro Defunctis as
part of these celebrations is doubly interesting. Firstly, because
it constitutes the first recording of one of the most popular works
at the beginning of the seventeenth century. And secondly, it reclaims
one of the greatest composers of the Spanish Baroque, who has been
overlooked for too long.
The so-called "Maestro Capitán" excelled at polyphonic
writing for two choirs (stile moderno), which was very fashionable
at the main musical centres in Europe and especially at St Mark's
Basilica in Venice. The Requiem for two choirs is one of Romero's
best works. It is very solid and the vocal writing is impeccable.
With the collaboration of the musicologist and performer Juan Carlos
Asensio, the program reconstructs a Mass for the Dead from the period,
with the characteristic alternation of polyphonic works and plainchant,
the latter taken from the El Escorial chant books from the beginning
of the seventeenth century. Matins responsories from the Office
for the Dead complete the program, which were sung during absolutions
at the time, and the magnificent psalm De profundis clamavi ad
te, which the priests recited or intoned while the procession
to the depositio or tomb of the deceased took place. Some
of these responsories were composed by another of Cervantes's contemporaries,
the Zaragozan Pedro Ruimonte (1565-1627), who was none other than
chapel master to the Governor of the Low Countries, the Archduke
Albert. His mournful works (in the Missae sex) were published
in Antwerp in 1614. The superb Libera me, Domine, which Hilarión
Eslava attributed to Mateo Romero, has been included in this recording
for its uniqueness and modern character, despite figuring in various
Spanish sources (although some as late as the eighteenth century)
as a work by Carlos Patiño (1600-1675). This recording of
the "Requiem for Cervantes" is, thus, of prime importance
in that it rediscovers some of the most outstanding works composed
in Spain at the beginning of the seventeenth century and sets them
in their original liturgical context.
La Grande Chapelle is made up of 20 of the best vocal and instrumental
soloists in Europe, specialists in historically-informed performance
using original instruments. The Gregorian part of the Requiem Mass
(Spanish liturgy) is performed by the Schola Antiqua, conducted
by Juan Carlos Asensio.
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