We spent a lot of our evenings at Santa Maria Maggiore, including two long nights of recording and, on Thursday evening, a concert that was part of a Lenten reflection by Cardinal Re, hosted by Cardinal Law, former archbishop of Boston. This concert was also covered by news agencies, and you can see some of the photographs of the event from the Associated Press: photo 1 (shown here), photo 2, photo 3, and photo 4.
Europe has been suffering through a colder, snowier winter than usual, and although we had some sunny days in Rome, it was often rainy and almost always cold. In most of the churches where we sang, we wore our coats when we could (i.e., all the time except when we were actually performing). By the end of the final recording session in Santa Maria Maggiore, I could (faintly) see my breath in the air. In the last photograph, you can see the nave of the church, a medieval building that incorporated the early Christian basilica on the site, with its Ionic columns and 5th-century mosaic sequence (the panels under the clerestory windows). Like so many churches in Rome, it is a Frankenstein monster of different styles, in which the dominant taste is that of the most recent era of powerful popes, the Baroque. What this means is a lot of glittery gold. I can't explain that rose window, which is, I think, the most recent part of the decoration.
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