Solemn
Eucharist for All Saints Day - Nov. 1, 8 p.m.
"Missa Pange Lingua" by JosquinDesPrez
Van Quinn, Organist/Choirmaster
"There
is always a danger of intense love destroying what I might call
the "polyphony" of life. What I mean is that we should
love God eternally with our whole hearts, but not so as to compromise
or diminish our earthly affections, but as a kind of cantus firmus
to which the other melodies of life provide the counterpoint."
(Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letter and Papers from Prison)
It is difficult to generalize about the saints, surely as richly
variegated a group as could be found within humankind. Some were
virgins and martyrs, but certainly not all. Some were learned,
but others very simple. Some were gracious and lovable, but many
would never have won a personality contest. Perhaps there really
were some that one could meet "at tea," although I have
never been absolutely convinced of this. One of the definitive
characteristics of those we call "saints" is their capacity
for a sustained focus on God and the things of God, an enduring
ability to keep their "eyes on the prize" of the "upward
call of God, " to be "in the world but not of it,"
to have the music of their lives set forth in glorious array one
fixed melody (a cantus firmus) sounding forth majestically through
all the changes and chances of this life. Their love of God however
powerful and controlling was modulated into many modes, constantly
interweaving sometimes harmoniously and sometimes discordantly
with the other themes and rhythms of life in this world. Sometimes
the radical transcendence of their lives is most clearly seen
in those moments of dissonance, moments when incompatible notes
clash together demanding some higher resolution (in music these
are called cross relations).
The Mass setting for this years All Saints Eucharist is
a cantus firmus mass. Josquin DesPrez (1450-1521) was arguably
the greatest composer before J.S. Bach. Of his music Martin Luther
once remarked, "All other composers must do what the notes
want, only Josquin can make the notes do what he wants."
Following an artistic convention common at least since the thirteenth
century Josquin bases his polyphonic (many independent musical
voices) mass on a cantus firmus, in this case the fourteenth-century
plainsong tune for a hymn attributed to Saint Thomas Aquinas (the
text can be found at number 329 in the hymnal).
Josquin begins each movement of the Mass with a quotation of
the opening melodic line of the chant, although in many different
rhythms. This might seem a little abstract and formulaic for a
compositional process, but remember Luthers assessment that
Josquin could make the notes do what he wanted them to do. Each
movement unfolds with great ingenuity and beauty, references to
the plainsong migrate effortlessly to melodies of Josquins
invention with a constantly shifting texture four independent
voices, duos, pairs of voices played off against each other. Rarely
Josquin reduces the texture to simple four-part chords, according
to convention at the most profound phrases of the Creed: et incarnates
est as if the unutterable mystery of the Incarnation of
God required only the simplest musical expression, a kind of musical
genuflection. Actually, the most common uses of the plainsong
hymn are difficult to pick out of the texture, based as they are
on interior phrases of the hymn: fructus ventris geerosi Rex effudit
gentium. Perhaps it is no accident that the textual reference
to the "fruit of the womb" literally fructifies into
a rich and dense musical texture. Throughout it all, the listener
is again and again called to pange lingua "sing, my
tongue, the mystery telling, of the glorious Body sing."
The All Saints Eucharist will be framed by J.S. Bachs
greatest organ composition, the "Passacaglia and Fugue in
C minor." Set in the ultimately "cosmic" key (the
lowest key in its minor form) this work exploits the full tonal
resources of an organ in a Baroque style. This work itself is
an astonishing set of variations on a simple, borrowed melody,
stated in single notes at the beginning (the Kyrie from an organ
mass by the eighteenth century French composer André Raison).
Albert Schweitzer called it a musical embodiment of Jesus
parable of the mustard seed, in a way the ultimate musical cantus
firmus.