![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||
| |
|||||
| |
|
|
|
||
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reflections on Life and Death in Contemporary Orthodox Music By Ivan Moody |
|
|
"It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives
in me." (Galatians 2:20) +
If
we are to live as Orthodox artists, it is clear that we must, with St
Paul, allow Christ to live in us. Whatever this may mean in terms of the
expression of a particular Orthodox tradition, this central imperative,
of allowing Christ's message to be transmitted through our own art, is
something with which we must deal in no uncertain terms. Whilst in Orthodox iconography there has
been some sense of continuity of tradition (interrupted and corrupted
though it may have become at certain points), when we come to consider
music the matter becomes more complicated. If such may not seem to be
the case to the composer who is used to writing and arranging for liturgical
use (the Kapellmeister, the psaltis…), when we come to the
professional composer, possibly with a burgeoning career, who finds himself
confronted with the necessity of using his art as an expression of Orthodox
spirituality, then we are dealing with something quite different. This is precisely what happened in the case
of Sir John Tavener, and something similar occurred with the Estonian
Arvo Pärt. With the former, there was an immediate attempt at integration
of Orthodox thought into his musical world, and an initial approach to
Orthodoxy from the musical aspect (the results of this may be clearly
heard in such works as Kyklike Kinesis and the Divine Liturgy
of St John Chrysostom, both coeval with his conversion) which achieved
an increasing refinement over the years. Pärt, in entirely different circumstances,
aimed at a musical expression of ever greater religiosity which bore fruit
when he was allowed to leave Estonia, but in the form of settings of Roman
Catholic liturgical texts, of which the Passion according to St John
is the most famous. Much more recently, Pärt has felt able to go directly
to Orthodox sources, frequently writing music to texts in Church Slavonic.
In both cases, preoccupation with Orthodox spirituality has meant a radical
change in musical terms, though it is also clear that their work up to
this point had already prepared the ground in no uncertain terms. Absolutely central to this change for both
composers has been the way they approach the idea of death. It is obvious
that the musical expression of the idea of death will relate, for these
composers as for others, very closely to the text being set (or the text
used as inspiration, if it is an instrumental work). Thus, Pãrt, in using
the established western musical form of the Passion (Passio Domini
Nostri Jesu Christi secundum Joannem, 1982), setting the text in Latin
and striving for an intentionally impersonal style of declamation (clearly
with the sound of Gregorian chant and early polyphony resonating in his
memory), halts at the Crucifixion and finishes with a luminous prayer
for mercy. Tavener, in tackling the same subject, travels forward directly
to the Resurrection (Resurrection, 1988; Fall and Resurrection,
1997), in the spirit of Orthodox hymnology and iconography, even though
such a graphic, all-inclusive patchwork is achieved rather at the expense
of a unified musical narrative. But the Crucifixion and Resurrection of
Christ are possibly the most difficult subjects to deal with in music,
as the present author has also found (Passion and Resurrection,
1992) in that they require an attempt to overcome an exclusively personal
response to the death of Christ in the interests of understanding and
transmitting the cosmic event that is His Resurrection, if we are to be
truly able to invite our listeners to "come and receive the light
from the Unwaning Light". The Greek composer Michael Adamis finds
another solution, in his astonishing oratorio Tetelestai ("It
is finished", 1987), by jumping with the joy of the Resurrection
from the Saviour's death to choral shouts of "Death, where is thy
victory, grave, where is thy sting?" A noteworthy instance of the way in which
an approach to the Orthodox way of death came about through personal tragedy
is Tavener's Eis Thanaton. This work was written following the
death of the composer's mother in 1985, during which time he came to feel
that he would write no more music. While in Greece, he read Andreas Kalvos's
poem Eis Thanaton and Philip Sherrard's essay upon it; music subsequently
came very quickly and resulted in what Tavener has described as an "icon
of sorrow" worked through as "part of a whole divine plan, not
of death as an isolated cruel imposition." Kalvos (1792-1869) exemplifies
a split, in Sherrard's view, which "resulted from an inability to
reconcile and integrate the rational and irrational elements of human
life on a higher level, on a level of understanding that transcends the
purely rational level". Eis Thanaton in particular is a key
poem because it "issues from the heart of Kalvos; own personal situation,
and second, because it reveals a perennial human situation and one which
became particularly acute towards the end of the eighteenth century."
[Sherrard 1978:47] Though Kalvos, meeting the ghost of his dead mother,
writes
Who is in danger? Now that I face death with courage I hold the anchor of salvation.
He
negates this, in Sherrard's view (and, indeed in that of Seferis, who
compared Kalvos with Hamlet) in the last verse by not seeking to live
through his recognition of the world beyond: instead, he "postures,
talks of scaling cliffs of virtue or, in another poem, of playing the
lyra at the edge of the open tomb". [Ibid., 48-49] How does Tavener treat this drawing back?
The answer is very simple - he ignores it, or, rather, he transmutes it
so that the experience described by the poet is indeed life-giving. The
figure of the Mother is transformed into the Mother of God and the Church,
which one can perfectly reasonably argue is implicit in Kalvos, but here
rendered absolutely explicit with the refrains "Alleluia, Alleluia,
Alleluia, Glory to Thee, O God" and a musical reference to the (Russian)
chant for "Christ is risen" at the end of the work. The change
in orchestral colour, with the upper strings and harp ascending to the
highest registers used during the course of the work, and the static gloom
of the trombones, percussion, 'cellos and double basses changing to a
regal (for Tavener, Byzantine) glow. Another experience of death, specifically
the idea that he himself might be near death, led to the writing of The
Last Sleep of the Virgin (1991) for "almost inaudible string
quartet and bells". "I think", wrote Tavener, "that
this inaudibility reflected my curious spiritual and physical state at
the time. I was so weak and was on the threshold of life and death."
[Tavener 1999:70] Elsewhere, he has said specifically that it is an eschatological
work, a "strange - strange to me - meditation on the Last Things."
[Tavener 1992] In terms of musical colour it reflects this strangeness
in its use of trills, of sudden explosions of chromatically meandering
melody and its constant quasi-silence. Tavener enters more specifically
into the last things in his "metaphysical pantomime" The
Tollhouses (in progress) and its satellite Diodia, for string
quartet (1995); this latter he has described as being "liquid metaphysics",
distilled from the former [Tavener 1999:80], which in turn arose from
a reading of Fr Seraphim Rose's controversial book on the subject. The
"pantomime" actually portrays symbolically a journey through
the tollhouses; in dealing so concretely with life after death it may
be considered utterly unique. It is hard to imagine Arvo Pärt travelling
a similar path. Though he and Tavener are often placed together with the
Roman Catholic composer Górecki and labelled "holy minimalists,"
it takes but a short acquaintance to realize that the music of one does
not sound like that of the others. They form no school (1). Pärt's music
has often been characterized by a sonic austerity which is largely foreign
to Tavener, as Passio demonstrates very well. There is no hint
of the Mediterranean in his work, and the lushness that has become apparent
in his more recent, specifically Orthodox writing arises, I would argue,
from the composer's knowledge of the music of the Russian Church. There
is no hint at all of the theatrical, as there is with Tavener, though
there is certainly monumentality, as Kanon Pokajanen (1997), with
a duration of some 84 minutes amply proves. This work is a setting of
the Canon of Repentance by St Andrew of Crete, entirely in Church
Slavonic. The text takes one tangibly from suffering to salvation, from
death to life:
Rise, wretched man, to God, and, remembering your sins, fall
down before your Creator, weeping and groaning, for He is merciful and will grant you
to know His will.
[Ode VI]
O Mother of God, help me who have strong hope in thee; implore thy Son that he may place me on His right hand, unworthy as I am, when he sitteth to judge the living and the dead. Amen.
[Ode IX]
Pärt accompanies St Andrew's spiritual journey
with music linked intimately to the text, imbued with the sound of Russian
liturgical singing, though not derived from any actual chant. The composer
writes of the composition of this work: "In this composition, as
in many of my vocal works, I tried to use language as a point of departure.
I wanted the word to be able to find its own sound, to draw its own melodic
line. Somewhat to my surprise, the resulting music is entirely immersed
in the particular character of Church Slavonic, a language used exclusively
in ecclesiastical texts." [Pärt 1998] While the composer's surprise
might in itself be surprising to anyone familiar with his works, there
is no doubt that what he says it true. There is nothing here of the impersonality
for which he strove in Passio (and which in any case was soon to
disappear even in other settings of western liturgical texts such as the
Magnificat Antiphons and the Magnificat). While it is hieratic
and solemn, it is also increasingly luminous as it follows the soul's
journey of repentance in St Andrew's text. Often death is ritualized, or, more accurately,
the artist's own reaction to death is sublimated into musical ritual;
this is true of Adamis's To Mirologi tis Panagias (1994) Tavener's
Ikon of the Crucifixion (1988) and the present writer's Lament
for Christ (1989), all three of which deal specifically with the image
of the Mother of God lamenting at the foot of the Cross. The Adamis achieves
this by a hypnotic concentration on certain musical phrases and intervals;
the Tavener by his favourite device of the repetition of the musical material
in different keys, and my own work by the use of a recurring wordless
refrain (and one might add Pärt's Stabat Mater as a work on the
same theme treating a western liturgical text through the refracting mirror
of Orthodox sensibility). In these diverse ways one is able to indicate
musically that, though the Theotokos beholds her Son in death, and we
in amazement can ask only "O Life, how canst Thou die?", yet
there is the underlying knowledge that Christ, the Giver of Life, will
rise again. It is not explicitly stated verbally, but is given, so to
speak, a musical exegesis. In such a way, then, the composer can indeed
begin to say "it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in
me."
References
Fisk
1994 Fisk, Josiah: "The
New Simplicity: The Music of Gorecki, Tavener and Pärt." The Hudson
Review 47/1, 1994. Hillier,
Paul: Arvo Part, Oxford Studies of Composers, 1997. Pärt
1998 Pärt, Arvo: Note to the recording of Kanon
Pokajanen, ECM 1654/55 457 834-2, 1998 Sherrard
1978 Sherrard, Philip: The Wound of Greece: Studies
in Neo-Hellenism, London and Athens, 1978 Tavener
1992 Tavener, John: Prefatory note to the score of
The Last Sleep of the Virgin, London, 1992 Tavener
1999 Tavener, John: The Music of Silence: A Composer's
Testament, London, 1999 Discography Moody:
Passion and Resurrection, Hyperion CDA66999 Pärt:
Kanon Pokajanen, ECM 1654/55 457 834-2 Pärt:
Passio, ECM 1310 837 109-2 Tavener:
Eis Thanaton, Theophany, Chandos CHAN 9440 Tavener:
The Last Sleep of the Virgin, Virgin 7234 5 45023 2 3 Notes 1.
Even in his profoundly negative assessment of the work of Gorecki, Part,
and Tavener, Josiah Fisk acknowledges that, "the three composers
have very different individual identies." [Fisk 1994:403] Ivan
Moody studied composition at London University and privately
with John Tavener. His work as a composer is centred on the spirituality
of the Orthodox Church, of which he is a member. He has composed works
for, among others, The Hilliard Ensemble and Fretwork. He has written
about early and contemporary music in many magazines worldwide and reviews
recordings for Gramophone. He lives with his family in Lisbon,
Portugal, working as a professional musician and directing choir at the
Church of St. Nektarios and St. Gregory. He can be reached at: ivanmoody@altavista.net From Jacob's
Well Newspaper of the Diocese of
New York and New Jersey Orthodox Church in America Spring-Summer 2001 |
|
All articles are copyright
the original author/publication unless otherwise noted. Permission to reproduce
these articles should be requested from the appropriate author/publication. All
other materials are © 2001-2008, Orthodox Research Institute. All Rights Reserved. |
|
For
more information about the Orthodox Research Institute: info@orthodoxresearchinstitute.org |
|
For
comments and/or problems about this site: webmaster@orthodoxresearchinstitute.org |
|