Kyrie (Vivaldi): Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Compositions by Antonio Vivaldi]]

[[Category:Compositions by Antonio Vivaldi]]

[[Category:Choral compositions]]

[[Category:Choral compositions]]

[[Category:Kyrie settings]]

{{classical-composition-stub}}

{{classical-composition-stub}}


Latest revision as of 23:12, 1 October 2025

Kyrie, RV 587

The Kyrie in G minor (RV 587) by Antonio Vivaldi is a setting of the Kyrie for two cori (two orchestras, each with respective four-part chorus) written between 1720-35. This is the only extant setting of the Kyrie the composer wrote.[1]

RV 587 is divided into three movements. The first movement begins with an orchestral interlude based on a modified version of the first movement of the composer’s Magnificat. The chorus is adorned with descending quavers in the orchestra. The second movement is a duet between cori and for two soprani in each cori. The final movement unites the two cori with a brief grave and enters a fugue. The fugue would later be reworked for the composer’s Concerto Madrigalesco (RV 129).

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