Gregorian Chant Melodies, Volumes I and II. The Monastic Choir of St.
Peter’s Abbey, Solesmes, France. Paraclete. $18.99 each.
Then and There, Here and Now. Chanticleer. Warner
Classics. $17.98.
There is nothing in modern music quite
comparable to the effect of hearing Gregorian chant performed in its original
form by a chorus fully versed in the music, the meaning of the words, and the
Latin language. Many contemporary composers have used Gregorian chant in their
own ways or modified it to accommodate the musical changes that have occurred
over the last 500 years and more. But nothing that is derived from the
original, nothing that builds on its foundation, nothing that reflects it, has
the purity and sense of timelessness that true Gregorian chant possesses. Even
for those who are not Catholic, even for those who are not religious at all,
there is an evanescent spirituality about this material, which was originally
created to accompany the Mass and divine office of Roman Catholicism, but
eventually became no less than the foundation of Western music: it is through
the modes in which Gregorian chant was written, especially the Ionian mode,
that the entire later system of tonality with which we are familiar came to be.
Pure Gregorian chant is very rarely heard outside abbeys and some very
conservative Catholic churches – a fact that makes its beauty and immense
spiritual power when sung by the Monastic Choir of St. Peter’s Abbey, Solesmes,
France, all the more striking. Because Gregorian chant involves unison singing,
it tends to sound simple, even minimalist, to modern ears; but in the voices of
the performers heard on a pair of new Paraclete recordings, it also sounds
positively angelic. Whatever one’s feelings about the divine, these CDs show
the truth of Aldous Huxley’s on-point observation, “After silence, that which
comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.”
For secular listeners and ones who are
religious but not Catholic, there is little reason to choose one of the new CDs
over the other, since the distinctions among the works on them lie largely in
the chants’ liturgical purposes. There is also little reason to select only one
of the discs: for an auditory experience quite unlike any other, with music
suitable for everything from focused meditation to genuine spiritual seeking to
calming background purposes, it makes perfect sense to have both recordings.
Volume I contains material from the Liber
Cantualis Mass plus Benediction of
the Blessed Sacrament; several Chants
to Our Lady; chants designed to be sung during Advent, at Christmas, during
Lent, at Pentecost and at Compline (evening prayers chanted before going to bed
for the night); and a Kyriale section
including a Sanctus, Agnus dei, Credo,
and two Kyrie chants. The contents of
Volume II, taken from the Liber
Cantualis, include Mass of the
Angels; two chants each for Advent, Christmas and the Passion; one each for
Easter and Pentecost; Benediction of the
Holy Sacrament; and several Chants to
Our Lady. Also on Volume II are an Antiphon
and Benedictus from the Office for
the Departed, and at the very end a lovely Hymn
Te Deum of Thanksgiving. The effect of this music is exceptional no matter
how secular our age: the beauties of Gregorian chant were intended to enhance
and ease the connection of humans with the divine, and even today these chants
encourage and invite inward looking, contemplation, thoughtfulness, and a kind
of separation from mundane affairs that somehow makes it easier to return to
everyday matters after spending time in an environment permeated by the masterful
singing of the Monastic Choir of St. Peter’s Abbey in Solesmes.
Gregorian
chant has been around so long that composers such as Giovanni Palestrina (c. 1525-1594),
Orlando di Lasso (c. 1530-1594), William Byrd (c. 1539-1623), and Antonio de
Salazar (1650-1715) were writing in distinctly later forms even when they created,
respectively, the Gaude gloriosa,
Surrexit pastor bonus, Ave verum corpus, and Salve Regina heard on a new Warner Classics CD. All these works have
roots, directly or indirectly, in Gregorian chant, but all sound very different
from what the Monastic Choir of St. Peter’s Abbey performs – even though the singers
on this disc are every bit as skilled, adept and sweet-sounding in their own
way. These performers are the members of the group called Chanticleer, whose
new CD celebrates 40 years of the ensemble’s existence with a polyglot
collection of 19 tracks whose oldest material is juxtaposed neatly (and a bit
disconcertingly) with very up-to-date pieces indeed. Those include five Chanticleer commissions: Whispers by Steven Stucky (1949-2016); Stelle, vostra mercè l’eccelse sfere by
Mason Bates (born 1977); Io son la
primavera by William Hawley (born 1950); Jarba, Mare Jarba, a traditional Hungarian song arranged for
Chanticleer by Stacy Garrop (born 1969); and Bei mir bist du shein by Sholom Secunda (1894-1974) as arranged by Brian
Hinman (born 1978). The dates of the various composers and arrangers are
instructive where this disc is concerned, because they show clearly just how
wide the variety of music is that Chanticleer sings. And while the ensemble has
a tone and a style that it brings to all the performances, it also has the
ability to adapt the grouping and relative volume of its members so as to give
a genuinely different feeling to the various pieces heard here. Now Is the Month of Maying by Thomas
Morley (1557-1602) and Il bianco e dolce
cigno by Jacques Arcadelt (1507-1568) date to roughly the same time and
have some musical approaches in common, and hearing them one after the others
makes eminent sense. But preceding the Morley with Nude Descending a Staircase by Allen Shearer (born 1943), and
following the Arcadelt with the Bates work (which dates to 2009), requires a
certain boldness bordering on the foolhardy. Chanticleer gets away with this
sort of thing precisely because the group’s voices are so well-matched and its
style is so smoothly elegant. All the works benefit from what may be called the
Chanticleer touch, even the inevitable Summertime
by George Gershwin (1898-1937). The remaining pieces here are Dúlamán by Michael McGlynn (born 1964),
a setting of a traditional Irish song; Straight
Street by James Woodie Alexander (1916-1996); I Have Had Singing by Steven Sametz (born 1954); and arrangements
of three traditional songs. Those are I
want to die easy; Hark, I Hear the Harps Eternal; and Keep your hand on the plow. One of the most remarkable things about
Chanticleer is that whether it is singing old-fashioned,
not-too-far-from-Gregorian-chant Latin material, traditional spirituals, folk
tunes, opera excerpts, or modern songs, its handling seems unerringly right, as if the members of the group
have absorbed the music so thoroughly that their reproduction of it has the
charm of inevitability. This new release offers only a very small part of the
material that Chanticleer has sung and recorded over its four decades, but it
is plenty to engage and please the group’s existing fans – and more than enough
to bring Chanticleer a new and enlarged audience if people hearing the CD are
encountering the group for the first time.
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