TY - BOOK ID - 113584733 TI - 'Allegri's Miserere' in the Sistine Chapel AU - O'Reilly, Graham AU - Allegri, Gregorio PY - 2020 SN - 1787449017 1783274875 PB - Woodbridge, Suffolk ; Rochester, NY : The Boydell Press is an imprint of Boydell & Brewer Ltd, DB - UniCat KW - Choral music. KW - Allegri, Gregorio, KW - Cappella Sistina (Vatican Palace, Vatican City) KW - Choral music KW - Choruses KW - Choruses, Sacred KW - Choruses, Secular KW - Music, Choral KW - Sacred choral music KW - Secular choral music KW - Church music KW - Music KW - Vocal music KW - History and criticism KW - Cappella pontificia (Vatican Palace, Vatican City) KW - Sistine Chapel (Vatican Palace, Vatican City) KW - Papal Chapel (Vatican Palace, Vatican City) KW - Sixtinische Kapelle (Vatican Palace, Vatican City) KW - Allegri's Miserere. KW - Gregorio Allegri. KW - Holy Week. KW - Italian composer. KW - Papal Choir. KW - Sistine Chapel. KW - choral music. KW - early Baroque music. KW - late Renaissance. KW - liturgical music. KW - music history. KW - musical adaptation. KW - musical performance. KW - Performance practice (Music) KW - Psalms (Music) KW - Choruses, Sacred, Unaccompanied. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:113584733 AB - The Miserere attributed to the Italian composer Gregorio Allegri (1582-1652) is one of the most popular, often performed and recorded choral pieces of late Renaissance/early Baroque music. It was composed during the reign of Pope Urban VIII in the 1630s, for the exclusive use of the Papal Choir in the Sistine Chapel during Holy Week, the last of thirteen surviving Misereres sung at the services of Tenebrae since 1514. When the young Mozart visited Rome, so the story goes, he transcribed it from memory, risking excommunication but helping posterity to reclaim the piece. Yet the Miserere known today bears little resemblance to Allegri's original or to its method of performance before 1900. This book is the first detailed account of this iconic work's performance history in the Sistine Chapel, in particular focussing on its heyday in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Rather than looking at the Miserere as a work on paper, the key to its genesis - as this book reveals - can only be found in a performance context. The book includes consideration both of the implications of that context in recreating it for performance, and of the history and practice of the "English Miserere" - the version commonly heard today. Appendices present key source transcriptions and two performance editions. ER -