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| October 15, 2004 Sarti's Russian Oratorio Giuseppe Sarti
(1729-1802) was a very successful composer in his time -- respected and liked by his
colleagues, popular with the public, Kapellmeister to Emperor Joseph II in Vienna
and to Catherine the Great in St. Petersburg. In June 1784 he played duets with Mozart,
who wrote to his father that, "Sarti is a splendid, first-rate creature!" Mozart
at that time composed a set of keyboard variations on an aria from Sartis immensely
popular opera Fra i due litiganti. Three years later he had the stage band in the
banquet scene of Don Giovanni play that aria (with Leporello remarking "Viva
i litiganti!"). Sarti was on his way to Russia when he met Mozart, and he
remained there until 1801, a year before his death in Berlin. In St. Petersburg he
directed the Italian Opera (raising its level considerably), composed stage works in
various languages (the Empress herself provided the libretto for one of them and
supervised the production), survived a brief ouster in a court intrigue, and founded music
schools in St. Petersburg and the Ukraine. He also composed several Russian liturgical
works and some celebratory ones in which his use of bells and cannon anticipated such
pieces as Beethovens Wellingtons Victory and Tchaikovskys 1812.
The origin of the work called simply "Russian Oratorio" remains a bit of a
mystery, but the work itself is such a gem that anyone who hears it must wonder why it
isnt part of the so-called standard repertory.
This 35-minute work, in seven movements, calls for double chorus and large orchestra, and is dated 1785. Possibly the occasion was an Easter celebration. The texts of the first three parts come from the Good Friday liturgy of the Orthodox Church. A subsequent section is a setting of Psalm 67, and the jubilant concluding chorus is Psalm 150: "Praise the Lord . . . Praise Him with fanfares . . . with harp and zither . . . with drum and horn . . . with lyre and flute . . . with crashing cymbal." The instrumental effects in this marvelous finale are ingenious and endearing, with the "Turkish music" so popular at the time (piccolo, cymbals, bass drum) given much prominence, the writing for the horns also remarkably effective, and an organ providing rich and colorful support for the entire aggregation.
...Richard Freed
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