Tavener: Fall and Resurrection
Track Listings
| 1. Part I: Silence, Darkness: In The Beginning, Before Time | ||
| 2. Part I: Representation Of Chaos | ||
| 3. Part I: Paradise | ||
| 4. Part I: The Serpent | ||
| 5. Part I: Catastrophe: The Implications Of The Fall | ||
| 6. Part I: Adam's Lament | ||
| 7. Part I: The Lament Of Mankind | ||
| 8. Part II: Prediction | ||
| 9. Part III: The Incarnation Of The Logos | ||
| 10. Part III: Cosmic Dance Of The Resurrection: All Is Transfigured |
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
This excellent live recording of John Tavener's massive millennial cantata was made at its premiere in St. Paul's Cathedral on January 4, 2000, and captures something of the extraordinarily epic atmosphere created at the performance. The composer writes that Fall and Resurrection "tries to encompass, in brief glimpses, the events which have taken place since the beginning of time, with reference to Christian doctrine." In order to achieve this, he evokes the spiritual world of religions other than Christianity by the use of a ram's horn trumpet and Tibetan temple bowls, as well as by telling the Christian story in condensed episodes. The singers are all superb, and navigate their way around the non-Western vocal techniques Tavener requires of them with impressive facility. Their contribution is matched by the BBC Singers and City of London Sinfonia pulling out all the stops when necessary. Tavener takes some new musical paths here (though he describes the idea of innovation for its own sake as "mindless") but also explores more familiar musical territory (long pedal notes, slow-moving harmonies, and chanting). Great Tavener for both fans and novices. --Warwick Thompson
Tavener: Fall and Resurrection, Music, Stephen Richardson, John Tavener, Richard Hickox, Michael Chance, London Sinfonia, The City of London Sinfonia, Patricia Rozario, Adrian Peacock, Choral, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral & Symphonic, Sacred Music for more than one Solist, Chorus, and Instru
Average customer rating:
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Tavener: Fall and Resurrection
Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004RDVF Release Date: 2000-04-25 |
Tracks:
Amazon.com
This excellent live recording of John Tavener's massive millennial cantata was made at its premiere in St. Paul's Cathedral on January 4, 2000, and captures something of the extraordinarily epic atmosphere created at the performance. The composer writes that Fall and Resurrection "tries to encompass, in brief glimpses, the events which have taken place since the beginning of time, with reference to Christian doctrine." In order to achieve this, he evokes the spiritual world of religions other than Christianity by the use of a ram's horn trumpet and Tibetan temple bowls, as well as by telling the Christian story in condensed episodes. The singers are all superb, and navigate their way around the non-Western vocal techniques Tavener requires of them with impressive facility. Their contribution is matched by the BBC Singers and City of London Sinfonia pulling out all the stops when necessary. Tavener takes some new musical paths here (though he describes the idea of innovation for its own sake as "mindless") but also explores more familiar musical territory (long pedal notes, slow-moving harmonies, and chanting). Great Tavener for both fans and novices. --Warwick ThompsonCustomer Reviews:
a voice teacher and early music fan .......2006-01-09
Another Viewpoint.......2003-05-29
The Fall of Substance and the Resurrection of Tedium.......2002-03-17
As far as imagination goes, what little thematic material that makes up this sprawling 75 minute extravaganza is frightfully banal. Even a composer that I detest, Andrew Lloyd Webber, has way more melodic fluency than this guy. The presenter on the DVD solemnly informs us of how much the self imposed mathematical complexities of the "Chaos" section so taxed poor Mr. Tavener that it took him a month to write each page (!) The result? Five minutes of seemingly random quasi-aleatoric noodling by the entire orchestra that tries one's patience almost as much one's credulity that it took him so long to write it. What little imagination that is in evidence seems to be primarily in the non-musical arena: theatricality i.e. lighting, the ersatz medieval aesthetic and the choice of the inspirational setting of St.Paul's Cathedral in London. A few musical moments did catch my ear in the "Logos" section but these few morsels of interest failed to buoy the bloated and flaccid corpse that is the remainder of this work.
As for craft, there is precious little of that too. As one other reviewer mentioned, Tavener tends to substitute repetition for development and, I would add, atmosphere for melodic and harmonic invention. In one interview segment he loftily decries development as a "secular" activity while in another interview segment he takes pains to impress the interviewer with a few childish variations he manages to wring from his malnourished Ney Flute "theme". His amatuerish handling of the orchestra and criminal abuse of the singers makes one wonder if he has had any training in orchestration whatsoever. As infuriating as I found his music, the disparaging comments he makes about Bach and Beethoven really frosted me. He implies that whereas he channels the "Creative Imagination of Christ" that those great Masters were "secular" dilettantes bound by their earthly limitations. For a supposedly religious man he seems to suffer greatly from the sins of arrogance and pride in his unilateral denunciation of their divine inspiration as being inauthentic. It hard not to conclude that he dismisses their genius in order to cover his own apparent lack of it.
In short, I hated this music (and the arrogance of the man), and I am disturbed to live in a world where this poverty stricken excuse for profundity has found such a wide audience at the expense of many deserving yet lesser performed composers. The DVD wasn't a total loss however: St.Paul's looks very impressive and well worth a visit on a future trip to London.
Like the soundtrack for a sombre sci-fi movie........2001-07-05
This is something of a relief for mere mortals like myself, and allows us to admit our more irreverant responses, although Tavener's claim is a bit like a conjurer doing a fantastic trick with a rabbit behind curtains so the audience can't see.
For all Tavener's millenial modernity, his use of tape recorders and words like 'sophia', 'theandric' and 'monody' (as in 'it's just another manic...'?), he hasn't been able to get much further than Haydn's 'The Creation' in his representation of Genesis, opening with silence, a deep rumble, a mad cacophany and eventual respite in Paradise. This is not a Paradise of verdant plenitude, but an austere, desert-like pastoral on flute.
There follows the Temptation in Arabic warbling (in contrast to Adam and Eve's Monty Pythonesque English clarity - is there a rather dubious system of values being enacted here?), and more pipes/flute music. A horn-driven choral explosion represents the Fall, followed by the 'Catastrophe' of screechy strings, silence and a choral blitzkrieg.
For all the World Music Eastern flavours, Tavener can't quite escape unexpected Western influences like Stravinsky, Copland, Strauss' 'Zarathustra', Walton's 'Belshazzar's Feast', Orff, even some suppressed gospel, which at least makes the thing listenable.
Adam and Eve's despair is sung in what sounds like pained birdsong, and the more melodic lament almost sounds Irish (throughout, the Arabic pipes threaten to burst into a jig, attesting to the international language of cod-regionalism). There follows the lengthy section 'The Incarnation of the Logos' (a tribute to Derrida, perhaps?), complete with counter-tenor, and great rhythmic attacks as the choir shout 'Crucify him!'.
This is a Passion for a secular age, the sacred equivalent of carob chocolate. Christ's invocation of 'Take. Eat. Drink' is a brilliant allusion to the irascible Jack from 'Father Ted'. The jubilant finale, 'Cosmic Dance of the Resurrection', sounds pretty much like Chaos, with extra screeching on top. And bells.
The sound mix is very low, somewhat diluting the attempt at an all-encompassing sound, but thankfully protecting my ears from metaphysical significance.
Life As It Was Intended.......2000-05-04
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