TAVENER: Lament for Jerusalem
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John Tavener (b. 1945) Lament for Jerusalem Sir John Tavener describes the Lament for Jerusalem as a mystical love song. The Lament brings together...
John Tavener (b. 1945)
Lament for Jerusalem
Sir John Tavener describes the Lament for Jerusalem as
a mystical love song. The Lament brings together
Christian, Judaic, and Islamic texts and is sung in Greek
and English. The musical structure is that of a lattice
whose proportions are carefully designed so that the
listener is invited to focus on key points of the text
which are themselves supported by transcendental
melodic, harmonic, and textural devices. The simplicity
of the work's form and its logical progression through a
series of seven linked, self-referential tableaux allow the
Lament to grow in power and beauty during its course.
The American composer Steve Reich has described
some of his own music as purveying 'a kind of dynamic
stasis' and that aptly sums up the effect of Tavener's
Lament for Jerusalem. The Lament is rooted in grim
tradition, yet it looks longingly into the future to a time
when beatific vision is restored, and, as in much of the
very greatest art, form and content are inseparable.
The shape of each Cycle is the same: the choir sings
a passage from Psalm 137, 'By the waters of Babylon,
there we sat down and we wept when we remembered
Sion', culminating in an ecstatic Alleluia; an
instrumental (Cosmic) Lament; a section sung by the
countertenor to segments of the prologue of the epic
work Masnavi by the thirteenth-century Islamic spiritual
master Jalaluddin Rumi; a further passage from Psalm
137 sung by the soprano leading to a quiet threefold
Orthodox Alleluia; finally, a heart-rending statement by
the choir of Christ's lament over Jerusalem (from
Chapter 23 of St Matthew's Gospel). The work's mosaic
structure is punctuated by growling bulges of varying
duration, texture, and dynamic provided by the lowest
strings after each of the choir's psalm-verses, after each
of the countertenor's Sufi verses, and after each of the
choir's Christic Laments: these represent the worldweary
sighs and groans of the city of Jerusalem.
On the face of it, the Lament for Jerusalem is
repetitive. Only one bar, however, the nostalgic tripartite
statement of the words of Christ 'He wept over her', is
repeated musically verbatim. Certainly the work is based
on remarkably few melodic, harmonic, and textural
elements, but these elements are crystallised, expanded,
altered, and developed in subtle but perceptible ways
throughout the piece. Indeed it is Tavener's
superlatively delicate treatment of his musical material
that affords the work such emotional momentum. The
constant fluctuation of mode within a firmly tonal
background, the rhythmic instability couched within
carefully-controlled metre, and the culturally
kaleidoscopic instrumentation create a musical alloy
whose chemistry is difficult to determine at close
quarters yet which from a distance reveals a work whose
whole is incomparably greater than the sum of its parts.
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the Lament is
the way in which the grandeur and majesty of the larger
gestures highlight the importance of the smaller (and
ultimately more universal) motifs. For all the heartfelt
renditions of the choir's Laments, growing as they do in
length and volume throughout the piece, the quiet trio at
the conclusion of those sections (set to the text of Luke
19, v41) expresses the emotional kernel. Similarly, for
all the melismatic weeping of the soprano in captivity,
her reflective final Alleluias provide the focus of her
distress, and the transparently orchestrated Cosmic
Laments with their constantly changing chromatic
inflections and variations of echoes and pre-echoes, are
hauntingly devoid of consolation.
Lament for Jerusalem is a testament to John
Tavener's craft and to his deep-rooted spirituality, the
admixture of which allows the Lament to function
simultaneously as a mundane cri de coeur and as
heavenly panacea. The piece is, as the composer
reminds us, a love poem, and its function is to move the
listener both by its simplicity and by its complex
interweaving of Christian, Judaic, and Islamic tradition.
In Tavener's own words: 'Perhaps the tiniest particle of
Hal, the Arabic word for divine love, might touch a
single soul, or better three souls'.
Jeremy Summerly
Lament for Jerusalem (more info)
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I. Cycle I: Stanza I - By the waters of Babylon (Chorus) - 2:01
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II. Cycle I: Cosmic Lament I - Listen to the reed-flute (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 4:09
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III. Cycle II: Stanza II - For there, they that had taken us captive (Chorus) - 1:31
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IV. Cycle II: Cosmic Lament II - 'Tis the fire of love (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 5:29
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V. Cycle III: Stanza III - How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land? (Chorus) - 1:21
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VI. Cycle III: Cosmic Lament III - Hail to thee Divine love! (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 5:47
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VII. Cycle IV: Stanza IV - Let my tongue cleave to my throat (Chorus) - 1:35
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VIII. Cycle IV: Cosmic Lament IV - If my Beloved touched me with His lips (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 6:18
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IX. Cycle V: Stanza V - Remember, O Lord, the sons of Edom (Chorus) - 1:35
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X. Cycle V: Cosmic Lament V - The beloved is all (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 6:29
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XI. Cycle VI: Stanza VI - O daughter of Babylon (Chorus) - 2:04
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XII. Cycle VI: Cosmic Lament VI - Love desires this secret should be revealed (Countertenor, Soprano) - 7:19
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XIII. Cycle VII: Stanza VII - Since thou receivest the supplications of sinners (Chorus) - 1:41
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XIV. Cycle VII: Cosmic Lament VII - Dost thou know why the mirror does not reflect (Countertenor, Soprano, Chorus) - 7:15