As we approach the holiest week of the year, the Schola Cantorum draws from a rich and varied palette of choral music, including renaissance motets from 16th century Italy, Germany and England, 18th century America, as well as music from modern composers from Scotland and Chicago. In the commentary, you’ll even discover a connection to Don McLean’s iconic album "American Pie."
Prelude 11:30am Mass, O Christ you Wept – John Bell (b. 1949)
This gentle funeral motet sets Bell’s tune, Palmer, as a homophonic hymn with a brief interlude between each verse. The text, by Graham Maule and the composer, tells us of Christ’s love for Lazarus and for all who pass away. The Gospel story of the raising of Lazarus (at this Mass for the Third Scrutiny) reminds us not only of Christ’s promise of eternal life, but also that Jesus was both fully divine and fully human in sharing our grief at the loss of friends and loved ones. That belief will be announced again next week in the Passion Sunday second reading from St. Paul’s letter to the Philippians, where “Christ emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, coming in human likeness…becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.”
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Kyrie 10am Mass, from Mass for Five Voices - William Byrd (1539 – 1623)
Byrd’s Masses for Three, Four, and Five Voices were composed between 1592-1595 for clandestine Catholic communities in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Along with the Gradualia from the early 1600s, these choral works made possible a sung celebration of the Roman Rite Mass, as it would have been celebrated by the continental priests that journeyed to England to preside at liturgies. The Mass is set in a polyphonic Tudor style featuring imitative entrances, often spaced in close adjacencies.
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Preparation of the Gifts 10am Mass, “Confitebor Tibi Domine”– Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525-1594)
Palestrina set the Offertory Proper for this Sunday in a typical Italian-polyphonic-post-Tridentine style. The text is from Psalm 118: “ I will praise you, O Lord, with my whole heart; deal bountifully with your servant, that I may live and observe your word; revive me according to your word, O Lord.” The motet begins with a confession of praise but is characterized musically as a calm meditation. Palestrina then memorably treats the two variances of the word ‘life,’ – “vivam” and “vivifica me”– with particular energy and interest. In this Fifth Sunday of Lent in the Year of Luke, the reflection has a particular resonance with the second reading from Paul’s letter to the Philippians, where we hear Paul acknowledge that every other pursuit he may have followed in the past can not compare to life in Christ and observing Christ’s word in the hopes of attaining the promise of eternal life.
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Preparation of the Gifts 11:30am Mass Lazarus – Paul Nicholson
This text is taken from the Office of Matins for “Lazarus Saturday” in the Orthodox calendar and was translated by J. Michael Thompson. Besides retelling the Gospel story, the text reminds us how much Lazarus was loved by Christ, and that the theme of raising the beloved is echoed in today’s Collect prayer that describes Christ’s sacrifice as motivated by love of the world. The motet is homophonically set with inventive modern harmonic language throughout. Nicholson is Director of Music at Saint Clement Church in Chicago and is a distinguished accompanist, vocal coach, composer, conductor and singer. Communion Motet 10:00am Mass, “Miserere mei, Deus” – William Byrd (c.1539/43-1623) The Tudor era English composer, William Byrd, published this piece in his 2nd volume of sacred songs (Cantiones Sacrea) in 1591, under a tolerant Protestant monarch, Elizabeth I. The motet is arranged for five voices, with sections interplaying between moving homophonic textures, and inventive imitative contrapuntal writing. The text is taken from the first verse of Psalm 51, the psalm most associated with the season of Lent.
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Communion Antiphon 11:30am Mass When Jesus Wept -- William Billings (1746 – 1800)
William Billings is considered America’s first composer of choral music. He was committed to strengthening congregational singing and was associated with a movement to pursue those ends in New England churches. This brief canon about the incarnate Jesus expressing his grief and mercy is particularly poignant as a commentary on the (Year A) Gospel today. An observant listener will discover a serendipitous coincidence in the Responsorial Psalm assigned for Year C. It refers to the Lord’s rescue of Israel from Babylonian captivity, the subject of William Billings’ other famous early American canon – “By the Waters of Babylon, we laid down and wept,” made famous nearly 50 years ago when it was brought back into common circulation by its inclusion on Don McLean’s album "American Pie."
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Communion Motet 11:30am Mass, “So Fahr Ich Hin Zu Jesu Christ” – Heinrich Schutz (1585-1672)
This motet is taken from Schütz’s Geistliche Chormusik collection, which was published in Dresden in 1648. Although Schütz was German, he studied under Gabrieli in Venice, and there is a strong Italian influence on his style. The text is an expressive prayer of desire for Jesus, and the peace found within. It speaks of being awakened by Christ’s call and being led to heaven after a period of sleep, mirroring today’s Scrtuniy Gospel where Jesus commands his friend Lazarus to come out of the tomb where was laid three days earlier. We live in the hope of that call as well.
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