I first encountered the music of Alexander Levine a couple of years ago
when Tenebrae recorded his Prayers for Mankind. A Symphony of Prayers
of Father Alexander Men (2007-08). I was impressed by the music and
by the fine performance it received (review)
so I welcomed the chance to hear Tenebrae in another of his works for a
cappella choir.
There is a link between this present work and the Prayers for Mankind.
The texts for Prayers for Mankind were a series of prayers by the
influential Russian Orthodox priest, Fr. Alexander Men (1935-1990) who was,
until his assassination in 1990 a leading figure in the religious revival
in post-Soviet Russia. It was while visiting the grave near Moscow of Fr.
Men, a family friend, in 2005 that Alexander Levine felt impelled to compose
a musical setting of the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom. Levine describes
the process that led him to compose the music in a booklet note. I was interested
to read that the finished score benefited from the patronage of Valery Gergiev
to whom Levine showed the score in 2007. Gergiev arranged forthe work to
be performed by the Mariinsky Opera Choir at his Easter Festival in 2008
and it was given at four consecutive Festivals between 2008 and 2011.
The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom is one of the key Eucharistic
liturgies of the Orthodox Church; it is used on most weekdays and dates
back, I believe, to the fifth century. Levine’s musical setting is divided
into 22 separate movements, all of which are quite short – in this performance
the majority last for between three and five minutes and the longest takes
6:20.
The music is recognisably founded on and indebted to the musical traditions
of the Orthodox Church yet, as you would expect, Levine has not slavishly
followed that tradition and produced a clone of earlier settings. That much
is obvious right at the start when, after the Deacon’s incantation the choir
sings “Amin”. However, this word is not set to the traditional two sonorous
block chords. Rather, the word floats around on intertwining thematic ribbons
before finally coming to rest on two soft block chords. In other words,
Levine has built on the Orthodox tradition but, very rightly, he’s given
it a contemporary slant and has brought his own musical experiences and
ideas to bear. Nor has he been afraid to bring in musical influences from
outside the Orthodox mainstream. I think it’s worth quoting from his note
on the piece. He says this:-
“I perceived the ethical values of liturgical prayers as being ecumenical
(my italics) in their essence …. That is why the music of this Liturgy highlights
different musical approaches found in Christian cultures across history
from Greek or Byzantine chant, to medieval polyphony. The pervading influence
of renaissance counterpoint and Byzantine chant alongside a poly-chord texture
features prominently in this liturgy.”
Much of the music is very beautiful. I can easily see two or three of the
movements having the potential to become popular as free-standing pieces
as has happened to ‘Bogoroditsye Devo’ from Rachmaninov’s All Night
Vigil. In this category I would place the intense, very beautiful First
Antiphon (Movement II); the Third Antiphon (Movement V), a wonderful setting
of The Beatitudes in which the music is sometimes assertive and sometimes
radiant; and the lovely Hymn to the Virgin (Movement XVI), which features
light, transparent musical textures, as befits the feminine subject.
I found that one very soon falls under the spell of Levine’s music. In my
case this had happened well before the end of the first movement, Introduction
and Great Litany, in which there are some ravishing choral textures. In
this movement, which is the longest, much of the music is slow and prayerful,
especially when the words ‘Lord, have mercy’ are being sung, but eventually
the choir’s prayer becomes more urgent in tone. This is a characteristic
that we will encounter quite often as the work unfolds: on many occasions
Levine doesn’t maintain the same tempo or mood for an entire movement; rather
he varies his music in urgency as the words demand. So, for example, the
third movement, Second Antiphon, starts with male voices and at quite a
steady pace. Gradually, the music becomes more urgent in tone, especially
as female voices are added to the vocal mix. We find that both the pace
of the music picks up and that the tessitura rises ever higher as the chorus
of praise intensifies.
Much of the music is slow or moderate in tempo, as one might expect, but
there are also many fervent, animated passages. The Trisagion Hymn (Movement
VII), for example, is, for the most part, strongly rhythmical, founded on
a repeated figure sung by the basses. The effect is very exciting. Immediately
afterwards, however, comes the highly contrasting Litany of Fervent Supplication.
Here Levine constructs 3:32 of very beautiful, contemplative music using
just three words of text.
Each individual movement contains rewarding and lovely music yet the whole
is greater than the sum of its parts. I find that the work’s greatest effect
is cumulative and it’s fitting that the final movement, ‘Blessed be the
Name of the Lord’, ends in a blaze of affirmation.
Levine’s Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom is one of those works which,
when you hear it, you feel the composer had to write – and that’s
without reading his note, which confirms that this is indeed the case. It
strikes me as a work of deep conviction and sincerity; a piece, in short,
that comes from the heart. The music is wonderfully varied, inventive, responsive
to the words and accessible to the listener. It’s a work that, I should
imagine, poses many technical challenges for the singers yet it is superbly
imagined for voices – the textures are wonderful and often ravish the ear.
In Nigel Short and Tenebrae the music has the best possible advocates. The
singing is immaculate and burns with conviction. It is, quite simply, superb.
Producer Nicholas Parker and Engineer Mike Hatch have recorded the performance
with great sympathy, producing sound that is clear yet also atmospheric.
Anyone interested in the music of the Orthodox Church should hear this beautiful
and imaginative score which respects and is built on the tradition of Orthodox
music yet at the same time takes that tradition in a new and exciting direction.
The disc is equally of interest to collectors who appreciate eloquent and
beautifully written modern choral music.
John Quinn
A beautiful and imaginative score, superbly performed by Tenebrae.
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