Kenneth Leighton (1929-1988)
Sacred Choral Works
Kenneth Leighton was born in the northern English city of
Wakefield and started composing at the age of eight. He gained many formative
musical experiences while a chorister at Wakefield Cathedral, before he went up
to Queen's College, Oxford, where he read Classics, and then the BMus. At
Oxford his composition teacher was Bernard Rose, and after being awarded the
Mendelssohn Scholarship, he studied with Goffredo Petrassi in Rome. During his
career he held several university appointments at Leeds, Edinburgh and Oxford,
and in 1970 returned to Edinburgh as Reid Professor of Music until his untimely
death.
Leighton's compositions include three symphonies. The first
of these (1964), a purely orchestral essay, was followed by two including
voices (1974, 1984). He was drawn to writing for virtuosi which resulted in
several concertos. There are three of these for piano (1951, 1960, 1969), and,
amongst others, concertos for violin (1952), cello (1956) and organ (1970). His
choral music includes the large-scale The Light Invisible (1958), and the
well-known carol Lully, lulla, thou little tiny child (1948). He wrote an
opera, Columba (1978), as well as vocal and chamber music, and a fine body of
piano works that reflect his skills as a pianist. Characteristics of his music
are its lyricism, rhythmic energy, virtuoso writing, and a penchant for
instrumental colour.
The legacy of Leighton's experience at Wakefield Cathedral was
profound, and accounts for the reason why he was drawn to compose for the
church throughout his career. As he commented: 'Any natural composer is a
product of his background, experience and training ... With my upbringing and my
boyhood as a cathedral chorister this is perhaps why I respond emotionally to
Christian subjects and texts ... church music is undoubtedly a channel of
communication for me ... early experiences are of immense and fundamental
importance in musical as in all other kinds of development and I therefore
speak as one who comes from inside the church'.
Leighton's first setting of the Magnificat and Nunc dimittis
is subtitled Collegium Magdalenae Oxoniense being composed for the choir of
Magdalen College in 1959 and dedicated to its choirmaster Bernard Rose. In both
canticles the organ part is elaborate, providing a buoyant texture that
underpins the words. The Magnificat is bright and joyous with its sections
bound together by the two-bar organ call to attention at the opening. Its
Gloria ends fervently with the words 'world without end' as an exultant
descending phrase punched out by the voices. In the Nunc dimittis the organ
part becomes more and more elaborate until it reaches its full glory in the
triumphant Gloria.
Give Me the Wings of Faith was composed in 1962 to a
commission from the church of St John the Baptist, Leytonstone, for its
Patronal Festival. It is written for soloists, choir and organ and within its
short span Leighton achieves a variety of sonorities and moods, which culminate
in a sonorous unison melody.
An Easter Sequence was commissioned by the Berkshire Boy
Choristers of the United States for their service in St Severin, Paris, on Low
Sunday 1969. For his texts Leighton used the Propers for the Sundays after
Easter, the Antiphon at First Vespers on Ascension Day and Psalm 23. It is
scored for two-part boys' or female voices, organ and trumpet. The music of the
Introit is vigorous, built around fanfare-like figures for trumpet and voices
as if heralding the risen Lord. Gently rocking voices begin the Gradual over
which a solo treble intones Christ's prophecy. His words 'Peace be to you' are
cast as a benign descending spread chord, which is followed by joyful
Alleluias. The organ takes over the rocking figure in the Offertory, as the
Angel greets the women in the garden, and a paean of dancing praise bursts out
with trumpet and voices echoing each other suggesting the perpetually ecstatic
voices of the heavenly host. For At the Communion, an organ solo marked by
florid writing forms a prelude to a serene setting of Psalm 23, whilst the
linked Communion is built around an exquisite oscillating melodic fragment.
Another organ solo with chord clusters leads to a final allegro in which the
trumpet returns and the voices unite for a flowing melody of affirmative
strength.
In the last decade of his life Leighton was striving to
compose music that spoke more directly to the listener, music that was, he
suggested, 'more static, but perhaps more varied and relaxed, with greater emphasis
on colour and harmony'. An example of this tendency is the motet What Love is
This of Thine? composed in 1985 for Dennis Townhill to mark his 25 years as
organist and master of the choristers at St Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh. It is
written for unaccompanied chorus with soloists and exemplifies Leighton's
superb skill at word-setting in the context of melody and harmony that colours
and heightens the text, as, for instance, the mellifluous blossoming of the
choral textures at the words 'O matchless love'.
During his thirties and forties much of Leighton's music was
austere in mood, using a highly chromatic harmonic language. Such dark
astringency is apparent in the cantata Crucifixus pro nobis, a masterpiece in
miniature, composed in 1961 for David Lumsden and the Choir of New College,
Oxford. Its four movements are, in effect, a concentrated, intense Passion,
scored for tenor, choir and organ. The metaphysical seventeenth-century texts,
three by Patrick Carey and the last by Phineas Fletcher, are redolent with
vivid imagery to which the composer was manifestly drawn. A stark, chill organ
motif heard at the opening recurs as a unifying element within the cantata, and
the raw melody of the tenor evokes the wintry images of Christ in the Cradle.
In Christ in the Garden the chorus portrays the emotion of the Lord in the
garden of Gethsemane in impassioned music that reflects words in the text such
as 'flame' and 'fire'. For Christ in his Passion the tenor and chorus are
combined, and its central six-part section rises to an anguished, dissonant
climax as it dwells on the agony of the crucifixion. The almost unbearable
build up of tension of the successive movements is typical of Leighton's music
at this time; its musical and emotional catharsis is reserved for Fletcher's
Hymn with its soothing harmonies and affecting vocal line.
Throughout his life Leighton found inspiration in hymns,
chorales and plainsong chants which were quarried as musical material for
pieces. An example is Veni creator spiritus for organ composed for the
Dunfermline Abbey Festival in 1987. The ancient melody is used in the manner of
a Bachian chorale prelude, as is the hymn tune Rockingham, composed in 1975 to
a commission by Oxford University Press for inclusion in their collection
Chorale Preludes on English Hymns. The tune is set to the familiar words When I
survey the wondrous Cross, which is heard against a haunting, lilting rhythm
that creates a mood of hushed awe.
Leighton's second setting of the evening canticles, The
Second Service, dates from 1971 and was commissioned by the Cathedral Organists
Association. It was dedicated to the memory of Brian Runnett, the outstanding,
organist and choirmaster of Norwich Cathedral, who died tragically at the age
of 35 in a car accident. Cushioned by gentle note clusters, the lyrical,
melismatic melody of the trebles floats above them, and is extended to the
other voices. A dance-like accompaniment for organ is established, recalling
that Leighton used to insist that in performance his music should be made to
dance, and over its syncopated rhythms the voices have long-limbed melodies
that are often sung in unison. The peaceful Gloria is built from the opening
motif and particularly effective is the overlapping descending phrase at the
words 'world without end'. A sombre mood characterizes the Nunc dimittis, as
its opening words so aptly befit the work's dedication, as do the tolling bells
in the accompaniment that commence at the word 'peace'. It concludes with a
consoling 'Amen'.
Andrew Burn
[1] & [16] Magnificat
My soul doth magnify the Lord:
and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.
For he hath regarded
the lowliness of his hand-maiden.
For behold from henceforth
all generations shall call me blessed.
For he that is mighty hath magnified me,
and holy is his Name.
And his mercy is on them that fear Him
throughout all generations.
He hath showed strength with his arm;
he hath scattered the proud
in the imagination of their hearts.
he hath put down the mighty from their seat,
and hath exalted the humble and meek.
he hath filled the hungry with good things,
and the rich he hath sent empty away.
he remembering his mercy
hath holpen his servant Israel,
as he promised to our forefathers,
Abraham and his seed, for ever.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son,
and to the Holy Ghost:
as it was in the beginning, is now,
and ever shall be;
world without end. Amen.
[2] & [17] Nunc
Dimittis
Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace,
according to thy word;
For mine eyes have seen thy salvation,
which thou hast prepared before the face
of
all people,
To be a light to lighten the Gentiles,
and to be the glory of thy people Israel.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son,
and to the Holy Ghost:
as it was in the beginning, is now,
and ever shall be;
world without end. Amen.
[3] Give
me the wings of faith
Give me the wings of faith to rise
Within the veil, and see
The Saints, how great their joys
How bright their glories be.
Once they were mourning here below,
And wet their couch with tears;
They wrestled hard, as we do now,
With sins and doubts and fears.
I ask them whence their victory came;
They, with united breath,
Ascribe their conquest to the Lamb,
Their triumph to his death.
They marked the footsteps that he trod,
His zeal inspired their breast,
And following their incarnate God,
Possess the promised rest.
Our glorious Leader claims our praise
For his own pattern given;
While the long cloud of witnesses
Show the same path to heav'n.
Isaac Watts
An Easter Sequence
[4] Introit
Alleluia! Alleluia!
Rejoice to God our helper:
Sing aloud to the God of Jacob.
[5] Gradual
Alleluia!
On the day of my resurrection, saith the Lord
I will go before you into Galilee.
After eight days, the door being shut,
Jesus stood in the midst of his disciples, and said:
'Peace be to you.' Alleluia.
[6] Offertory
An angel of the Lord descended from heaven
and
said to the women:
'He whom ye seek is risen, as he said.'
Alleluia.
[7] At
the Communion
The Lord is my Shepherd,
therefore
can I lack nothing.
He shall feed me in a green pasture,
and
shall lead me forth beside the waters of comfort.
He shall convert my soul,
and
shall bring me forth in the paths of righteousness,
for His Name's sake.
Yea, though I walk through
the
valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me,
Thy
rod and Thy staff comfort me.
But Thy loving kindness and Thy mercy shall follow
me
all the days of my life,
and
I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.
Alleluia.
I am the good shepherd,
I know my sheep, and my sheep know me.
Alleluia.
[8] Sortie
God is ascended,
God is ascended in Jubilee
and the Lord in the sound of the trumpet,
Alleluia!
Rejoice to God our helper:
Sing aloud to the God of Jacob.
[10] What
love is this of thine?
What love is this of thine that cannot be
In thine infinity, O Lord, confined?
Unless it in thy very person see
Infinity and finity conjoined?
What! Hath thy Godhead as not satisfied
Married our manhood, making it its bride?
Oh, matchless love!
Filling Heaven to the brim!
O'er running it, all running o'er beside this world!
Nay, over-flowing hell, wherein
For thine elect there rose a mighty tide,
That there our veins might through thy person bleed
To quench those flames that else would on us feed!
Oh, that thy love might overflow my heart,
To fire the same with love!
For love I would.
But oh, my straitened breast!
My lifeless spark!
My fireless flame!
What, chilly, love, and cold?
In measure small?
In manner chilly?
See! Lord, blow the coal,
Thy love inflame in me.
Edmund Taylor, c. 1642 - 1729
Crucifixus pro nobis
[11] Christ
in the Cradle
Look, how he shakes for cold!
How pale his lips are grown!
Wherein his limbs to fold
Yet mantle has he none.
His pretty feet and hands
(Of late more pure and white
Than is the snow
That pains them so)
Have lost their candour quite.
His lips are blue
(Where roses grew).
He's frozen everywhere:
All th'heat he has
Joseph, alas,
Gives in a groan; or Mary in a tear.
Patrick Carey, d. 1651
[12] Christ
in the Garden
Look how he glows for heat!
What flames come from his eyes!
'Tis blood that he does sweat.
Blood his bright forehead dyes:
See, see! It trickles down;
Look, how it showers amain!
Through every pore
His blood runs o'er,
And empty leaves each vein.
His very heart
Burns in each part;
A fire his breast doth sear:
For all this flame,
To cool the same
He only breathes a sigh, and weeps a tear.
Patrick Carey
[13] Christ
in his Passion
What bruises do I see!
What hideous stripes are those!
Could any cruel be
Enough, to give such blows?
Look, how they bind his arms
And vex his soul with scorns,
Upon his hair
They make him wear
A crown of piercing thorns.
Through hands and feet
Sharp nails they beat:
And now the cross they rear:
Many look on;
But only John
Stands by to sigh, Mary to shed a tear.
Why did he shake for cold?
Why did he glow for heat?
Dissolve that frost he could,
He could call back that sweat.
Those bruises, stripes, bonds, taunts,
Those thorns, which thou didst see,
Those nails, that cross,
His own life's loss,
Why, oh, why suffered he?
'Twas for thy sake.
Thou, thou didst make
Him all those torments bear:
If then his love
Do thy soul move,
Sigh out a groan, weep down a melting tear.
Patrick Carey
[14] Hymn
Drop, drop, slow tears,
And bathe those beauteous feet
Which brought from Heaven
The news and Prince of Peace:
Cease not, wet eyes,
His mercy to entreat:
To cry for vengeance
Sin doth never cease
In your deep floods
Drown all my faults and fears:
Nor let His eye
See sin, but through my tears
Phineas Fletcher, 1582 - 1650