Pope's choir launches US tour as it seeks to recapture glory

July 30, 2017 07:25 pm | Updated 07:26 pm IST - Vatican City

Maestro Massimo Palombella poses for photos with the piano that used to belong to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and that he donated to the Sistine Chapel choir when he was elected Pope Benedict XVI, after an interview with the Associated Press in Rome. The Sistine Chapel choir is embarking on its first U.S. tour in 30 years, hoping to show audiences in New York, Washington and Detroit that it has buried, once and for all, a reputation for being the Sistine Screamers.

Maestro Massimo Palombella poses for photos with the piano that used to belong to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and that he donated to the Sistine Chapel choir when he was elected Pope Benedict XVI, after an interview with the Associated Press in Rome. The Sistine Chapel choir is embarking on its first U.S. tour in 30 years, hoping to show audiences in New York, Washington and Detroit that it has buried, once and for all, a reputation for being the Sistine Screamers.

The Vatican’s Sistine Chapel Choir is embarking on its first U.S. tour in 30 years, hoping to show audiences in New York, Washington and Detroit that it has abandoned the habits that earned it a reputation as the “Sistine Screamers.”

The Pontifical Musical Chapel Sistina, colloquially known as the “Pope’s Choir,” bills itself as the world’s oldest choir, part of the tradition of liturgical choirs that have sung for pontiffs since the first centuries of the Roman Catholic Church..

Today, the group of 20 adults and 30 boys performs regularly in the Sistine Chapel below Michelangelo’s masterpieces, at Masses the pope celebrates in St. Peter’s Basilica and for international concert appearances.

“Truly, they were singing in a manner that had no relation to the old music,” choir master Monsignor Massimo Palombella said.

To return the choir to its early glory in the 16th century, when the group attracted the best singers in Europe, Palombella did extensive research. He sifted through the Vatican archives, studying music manuscripts and analyzing the handwriting of Renaissance composers.

These days, the choir once again is drawing talent. Its current members include singers from Poland, Britain, Brazil and Argentina. Diegogaston Zamediom 40, says being the first Argentine singer in the choir of the first Argentine pope is the “maximum of the maximum.”

Palombella, who was named choir master in 2010 and was recently reconfirmed, hopes the concerts in the U.S. will effectively “communicate the image of God and spirituality that this music brings with it.”

Enrico Torre, a 27-year-old alto, said he is looking forward to visiting New York so he can catch a Broadway musical.

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