BALAKAUSKAS: Requiem in Memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis
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Osvaldas Balakauskas (b. 1937) Requiem in memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis (1995) The music of Osvaldas Balakauskas is, above all, associated with clarity of...
Osvaldas Balakauskas (b. 1937)
Requiem in memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis (1995)
The music of Osvaldas Balakauskas is, above all,
associated with clarity of style and form. Nearly every
one of his compositions bears witness to the composer's
commitment to pure form and the innovative
development of tradition, as does his system of
composition, Dodekatonika, which gives his music its
unique harmonic flavour, and is frequently described as
Balakauskas's tonality.
As one of the unmistakable leaders of the modern
school of Lithuanian composition, and, in an official
capacity, as head of the Composition Department at the
Lithuanian Academy of Music, Osvaldas Balakauskas,
when necessary, has not shunned a public rôle. He was
a council member with the Sajūdis movement from 1988
to 1992, and Lithuanian ambassador to France, Spain
and Portugal (residing in Paris) from 1992 to 1994. For
his contribution to Lithuanian culture, he was granted
the National Award in 1996, and the Third Order of
Grand Duke Gediminas of Lithuania in 1998.
Balakauskas's music has aroused interest not only in
Lithuania. Initially it was heard within the context of the
Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc environment, and his
works were performed at the Moscow Stars Festival, the
Krzysztof Penderecki Festival in Lusl´awice, Warsaw
Autumn, Prague Spring, Berliner Festwochen, Zagreb
Biennale, and elsewhere. Later, with a liberalisation of
the political situation, Osvaldas Balakauskas's music
began to make its way into a broader milieu, including,
among others, the Helsinki Festival, Huddersfield
Contemporary Music Festival, Schleswig-Holstein
Festival, New Haven Arts and Ideas, Europa Musicale,
Vale of Glamorgan Festival, and MaerzMusik, among
others. His artistic career was typical for a composer of
his generation. It began, during the Khruschev "thaw" in
the early 1960s, with a marked interest in the avantgarde,
even though under the Soviet system such interest
in innovations from the West was seen as being
somewhat dissident. Later, in consideration for the
communicative aspects of his music, Balakauskas
returned to traditions which the avant-garde
endeavoured to deny. It would, however, be incorrect to
call Osvaldas Balakauskas's work post-modernist.
Essentially he remained true to the ideas of modernism,
focusing on aspects such as coherence of form, integrity
of structural parameters, and a distinctive system of
pitch and modal organization. Totally foreign to
Balakauskas is the post-modernist concept that
everything in music has been already created, that what
remains is simply re-creation. In his works any
recognisable musical elements, jazz, classical cadences
or medieval organum, become an integral part of the
composer's own unique style.
Osvaldas Balakauskas is not a typical Lithuanian
composer, in the sense that his musical origins are not
connected with the Lithuanian traditional composition
school, one of whose basic tenets is founded on folkmusic
principles. In this aspect his work has always been
particularly European, and he has been reproached for
creating music which lacked national character.
Interestingly the identity of his music is heard
completely differently abroad, where the overall mood
of his works, and the principles of development of the
material are seen as features specifically national in
character.
Balakauskas was greatly influenced by his studies
with Boris Lyatoshynsky at the Kiev Conservatoire
between 1964 and 1969. It was not a conservatory on the
level of Moscow or Leningrad, and the professor was
considered fairly conservative, but while in Kiev,
Balakauskas immersed himself in the modernist
underground of Ukraine, in an atmosphere that was
missing in Vilnius. He was close friends with
contemporaries Leonid Hrabovsky and Valentin
Silvestrov, and collaborated with a group of talented
young composers who were eagerly engrossed in ideas
coming from the West, and who actively resisted the
standardised aesthetics of Soviet music, which at that
time was primarily orientated towards the work of
Dmitry Shostakovich and Sergey Prokofiev.
Balakauskas returned to Vilnius in 1972 as a mature
artist. He avoided the innovations of the Warsaw
Autumn, which affected a great many other Lithuanian
composers in that period, and is one of those composers
who is not overly concerned with music fashion, first
selecting and proving each innovation himself, to be
described, perhaps, as a Lithuanian Messiaen. His
dodecaphonic principles, the creation of new tonal
connections within the series of non-repeating notes
(usually from eight to twelve), which are built not as
abstract sound constructions, but as modes with inherent
laws of harmonic tension, initially reveal his spiritual
affinity with the creative thinking of the French master.
His delicate rhythmic games (metro-rhythmic
progressions, additive augmentation of prolonged
durations) are also evocative of Messiaen's nonretrogradable
rhythms, though Balakauskas's rhythmic
systems derive from the theories of Boris Blacher.
Finally there is a common focus on sound colour -
Balakauskas is considered one of the most sensitive
masters of orchestration in Lithuanian music - and a
certain leaning towards musical exoticism.
The creative style of Balakauskas has changed over
a period of nearly forty years, and it is possible to
delineate it according to more detailed or broader
periods. At the present time the composer is striving for
musical simplicity (i.e., for all parameters to be subject
to a single principle, rather than simplifying the music
itself), and he also declares himself as having returned to
jazz favoured by him since his youth, to swinging
rhythms and quasi-improvisational melodies. Stylistic
changes in his work were never radical, however, and
his writing remains recognisable from his very first to
the most recent compositions.
Requiem in memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis (1995) is
an exceptional work in Osvaldas Balakauskas's output.
It is his only religious composition, and marks a new
turning-point in the direction of simplicity. Unusual also
is the fact that, for the first time, the composer openly
declares his spiritual, as well as his public principles.
This is not characteristic of him, as he had professed to
adhere to the self-sufficiency of music as a specific
sphere of art.
The Requiem appeared as the result of a strong
external impulse. Stasys Lozoraitis (1924-1994), a
former Lithuanian diplomat representing Lithuania at
the Holy See and in America during the Soviet period,
died in 1994. He ran for president in independent
Lithuania in 1993, and although he lost the election,
became an unquestionable authority in the country. His
unexpected death shocked Lithuania's intellectuals, and
Balakauskas's Requiem, written the following year,
embodied the nation's respect for him. This work is no
equal to the monumental settings of Berlioz, Verdi,
Britten or Penderecki, with their exaltation of universal
mourning. According to Enrique Alberto Arias, a
professor at Chicago DePaul University, Balakauskas's
Requiem could be assigned to the neo-medieval trend of
the twentieth century, as represented by Tavener and
Part, and by some works of Hindemith and Messiaen. A
certain contextual parallel could also be made with
Gabriel Faure and Maurice Durufle's serene settings,
whose originality stems from their use of a Gregorian
chant. Balakauskas does revert to the tradition of
liturgical music from the early Middle Ages, Gregorian
chant and organum, as well as ars nova motets, but he
does not follow the canonical structure of a Requiem
Mass. The structure of Balakauskas's Requiem is more
akin to the concert tradition of the genre. The work
consists of twelve parts: the Requiem Introit and the
Kyrie, the Dies irae sequence divided into five parts
(Dies irae, Tuba mirum, Rex tremendae, Recordare,
Confutatis), the Domine Jesu offertory, Hostias,
Sanctus, Benedictus, followed, unusually, by the
Lacrymosa of the Dies irae, and the Agnus Dei.
Interestingly the structure here is very close to that of
Mozart's Requiem.
Balakauskas's Requiem is an intimate chamber
work in character and scoring, performed by a mezzo-
soprano, choir and chamber orchestra. The composer
himself claims to have created an emphatically
traditional work, though it would appear that here he
upholds the old division between the spheres of musica
sacra, with its cultivation of true-and-tried values, and
that of the innovation-seeking musica profana.
The musical language of the Requiem, compared
with Balakauskas's earlier works, is more restrained, the
modal structure based on medieval principles. The very
first sounds of the Requiem are representative of its
style: a characteristic succession of parallel fifths on the
underlying D in the strings, the functional centre of the
whole work, and choir voices moving in the spirit of a
twelfth-century Leonin organum. As the work develops,
the pedal point moves through a circle of fifths, and
returns once again to D in the last part of the Agnus Dei
(finalis in Dorian mode). In the Confutatis the composer
introduces bitonality, as if to illustrate the text. There are
other illustrative sections in the work as well, such as the
shout of the trombone in the Tuba mirum. Yet,
according to the composer, the relationship here
between the music and the text is objective, and the
music is as it is supposed to be when speaking the word
of God.
The soloist and choir parts maintain a comfortable
range, and are based on the old psalmodic principles of
antiphonal and responsorial singing, with the occasional
inclusion of the orchestra, as when instrumental sound
blocks play against the choir, as at the beginning of
Sanctus. The choir melodies are frequently sung in a
homo-rhythmic organum. Meanwhile the solo part, first
heard in the Tuba mirum, is given embellishments, in the
spirit of Gregorian chant melismata, which give the
music its distinctive elegance. Among the various
unexpected connections, there is the beginning of the
Rex tremendae, men's voices accompanied by low
strings, reminiscent of the composer's reference to yet
another source, Georgian hymns. The rhythmic structure
of the Requiem is related to the technique of the ars nova
mensuralists; according to the composer, the score could
even be non-metered. The whole of the composition has
no characteristics of culminative development, and the
soft contrasts are derived by combining parts of diverse
character, once again with an orientation to the aesthetic
of the Renaissance and earlier times.
In conjunction with the old forms, there is here a
rebirth of a medieval, God-directed spirituality, and a
peaceful understanding of death and mourning. "I do not
believe that death is a problem, for we do not solve it; it
is unyielding and always resolved for us [...] It is a
condition of life," the composer once said in an
interview.
Beata Leščinska
translated by Vida Urbonaviãius
Requiem in Memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis (more info)
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Requiem in Memoriam Stasys Lozoraitis - 4:01
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Dies irae - 5:02
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Tuba mirum - 4:38
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Rex tremendae - 3:49
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Recordare - 4:52
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Confutatis - 4:04
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Domine Jesu - 2:44
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Hostias - 4:41
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Sanctus - 3:49
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Benedictus - 2:24
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Lacrymosa - 5:31
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Agnus Dei - 7:13