James MacMillan’s Roman Catholic faith has 
                been a profound influence on and source of inspiration for much 
                of his music. In particular, it’s led him to compose a good deal 
                of music inspired by the events of Holy Week and Easter. These 
                have included his magnificent 
St. John Passion (
review), 
                
Seven Last Words from the Cross (
review) 
                and his earlier orchestral triptych, 
Triduum (1996-97). 
                
                
 
                Visitatio Sepulchri (Visit to the tomb) is roughly contemporaneous 
                  with Seven Last Words from the Cross. Originally conceived as 
                  a ‘sacred opera’ for seven soloists (SSATTB and male speaker) 
                  it is presented here in the revised version for chorus and chamber 
                  orchestra in which each of the original solo roles is allotted 
                  to a section of the choir. This is, I think, the first recording 
                  of the work in this format though I see from the Boosey & 
                  Hawkes website 
                  that there was an earlier recording of the version for solo 
                  voices, which is no longer available. The notes accompanying 
                  this CD are by Stephen Johnson and they are very useful. However, 
                  I’d recommend that listeners also take a look at the composer’s 
                  own note on the Boosey’s website, which usefully supplements 
                  Mr Johnson’s thoughts. 
                
The work is a powerful one. The first of its three movements 
                  is purely orchestral and it depicts the Crucifixion of Christ 
                  in music that, at the start, is violent, jagged and aggressive. 
                  Eventually this gives way to what Stephen Johnson calls a “quasi-choral 
                  section” for strings. At first hearing this music may seem to 
                  offer repose after what has gone before but it’s unquiet music 
                  and it sounds to me as if it portrays exhaustion and the last 
                  death throes of the spirit. 
                  
                  The second section depicts the actual visit to the tomb. In 
                  the Gospels we read how some of Christ’s female followers visited 
                  the place where he had been buried very early the next morning 
                  to find the tombstone rolled away, the tomb empty and an Angel 
                  there to greet them. In MacMillan’s piece the words of these 
                  women are sung by the female singers, obviously, while the male 
                  voices depict the Angel. This music may mean less to non-believers 
                  but I found it quite revelatory as an aural imagination of the 
                  scene. Imagine, if you will, a small group of women, already 
                  traumatised by the events of the previous day, visiting a place 
                  that was strange to them – a garden, we are told, in which the 
                  tomb had been created – in the half-light of dawn. Their fear 
                  and confusion are tellingly conveyed in MacMillan’s music while 
                  the imaginative orchestral colouring conveys extremely suggestively 
                  the atmosphere of the surroundings. It’s a brilliant piece of 
                  writing. Later in the movement MacMillan sets some verses from 
                  the medieval Easter hymn, ‘Victimae Paschali laudes’. 
                  
                  The third movement, which follows without a break, is a setting 
                  of the Te Deum. This extended setting occupies nearly half of 
                  the duration of the entire piece - 23:32 in this performance 
                  - and it’s a remarkable conception. At the start you can hear 
                  that the choral parts have their roots in the old plainchant 
                  melody of the hymn but MacMillan has utterly transformed it. 
                  Fragments of the text and of musical phrases are hurled around, 
                  it seems, from one voice part to another and the overall effect 
                  is one of a wild tumult of praise. Meanwhile the amazingly busy 
                  orchestration adds to the ferment. This opening section of the 
                  movement is impassioned, full-on music with a consistently strong 
                  rhythmic impulse. I would imagine that it’s hugely demanding 
                  of the singers. 
                  
                  Around 7:00, at ‘Tu ad liberandum suscepturus hominem’, the 
                  plainchant melody is heard again, more richly harmonised than 
                  before, and this ushers in a calmer episode; and not before 
                  time – the listener needs the respite from the teeming invention 
                  thus far heard. Actually, it feels like more than seven minutes 
                  has elapsed, so frenetic has been the pace of the musical argument 
                  up to this point. The calmer section is quite extended but the 
                  energy levels pick up again around 14:58, at ‘et laudamus Nomen 
                  tuum in saeculum’. At 18:58, led by the trumpets, the music 
                  gathers itself for a final major-key peroration of no little 
                  splendour, in which the plainchant theme is again prominent. 
                  However, the composer has one more surprise in store. When everything 
                  seems set fair for a Big Finish the music starts to die down 
                  (at 20:00) and as the orchestra subsides almost to nothing we 
                  hear the choir whispering what I think are the last couple of 
                  lines of the hymn – even listening through headphones it’s almost 
                  impossible to make out the words, which I’m sure is intentional. 
                  After all the preceding forthright praise of God MacMillan is 
                  surely emphasising here how tiny and puny is mankind compared 
                  to the Creator. So ends an extraordinary but very impressive 
                  setting of the Te Deum. It’s the culmination of what is a powerful 
                  and moving work. 
                  
                  Sun-Dogs is very different. It’s for unaccompanied chorus 
                  and though quite a number of unconventional vocal effects are 
                  employed, thirteen years on from Visitatio Sepulchri 
                  we find MacMillan employing a different and, superficially, 
                  ‘easier’ and more approachable musical language. The piece is 
                  cast in five movements and the words are chiefly by the poet 
                  Michael Symmonds Roberts, who has provided texts for several 
                  other MacMillan pieces, notably his opera The Sacrifice 
                  (review), 
                  as well as the choral works Quickening (1998) (review) 
                  and The Birds of Rhiannon (2001) (review). 
                  The words – and the work itself – are somewhat ambiguous in 
                  that various ancient symbolic views of dogs are juxtaposed and 
                  contrasted. Thus, at various points in the score we find the 
                  dog portrayed as a killer and as man’s faithful companion while 
                  religious symbolism also comes into the equation. If all this 
                  sounds esoteric or contrived it’s actually far more convincing 
                  and works better than I’ve described it. 
                  
                  Within the five movements MacMillan’s writing is very varied 
                  and highly imaginative. There is richly harmonised homophonic 
                  writing in the first movement while the third is a virtuoso 
                  piece, quickly paced and full of urgency. Stephen Johnson suggests 
                  this movement might be suitable as a test-piece in an advanced 
                  choral competition. All I can say is that the contestant choirs 
                  would have to be extremely proficient to do justice to the music 
                  in the way that the excellent Netherlands Radio Choir achieves. 
                  The longest movement, the fourth, is the most far-reaching, 
                  both musically and philosophically. MacMillan has some of the 
                  singers intoning words by Symmonds Roberts in the foreground. 
                  These words describe dogs offering half-chewed food to their 
                  owner and the text is set to chant-like music. Meanwhile, quietly 
                  in the background other members of the choir sing Christ’s words 
                  at the Institution of the Eucharist. Put the two ideas together 
                  and you have some potent symbolism. One feature of this movement 
                  puzzles me. A couple of times we hear some of the performers 
                  whistling a jaunty little tune that has no obvious connection 
                  to the rest of the music; what does it signify? This track on 
                  the disc lasts for 7:18 and a note in the booklet refers to 
                  a “drawn-out fading away”. In fact, if you play the disc at 
                  a realistic volume level for domestic listening I think you’ll 
                  find that, even if you listen through headphones, all you can 
                  hear after 6:22 is silence. The last movement has a vivid, dramatic 
                  opening for the first of the three stanzas of Michael Symmonds 
                  Roberts’s poem. The remaining two are set to much calmer, thoughtful 
                  music – and once again that jaunty whistling reappears; it clearly 
                  has a significance that currently eludes me. 
                  
                  Along with the Chandos label, BIS has done sterling work to 
                  bring the music of James MacMillan to a wide audience through 
                  an enlightened series of fine recordings. This latest offering 
                  is another important addition to the catalogue. It presents 
                  two highly contrasting works by this outstanding composer, both 
                  of which are fascinating and repay careful listening. 
                  
                  The performances are absolutely superb. Both the playing and 
                  the singing are incisive and assured and I’m sure the composer 
                  will have been delighted with the results. I listened to this 
                  disc in CD format. The recorded sound is in the demonstration 
                  class, in every respect; in particular the percussion in Visitatio 
                  Sepulchri is reported with stunning realism. James MacMillan 
                  is one of the most important contemporary composers and admirers 
                  of his eloquent and stirring music should hasten to add this 
                  excellent CD to their collection.
                
John Quinn
                
Downloads available from http://www.eclassical.com