Past event

Program

From the director

Dear friends: 

It is my great joy to welcome you to Long, Long Ago, Lux’s third concert program of the 2024-2025 Season. We are so grateful for the time we’ve had together as we’ve worked to bring this program to fruition. As we continue to celebrate our tenth anniversary, we’ve programmed some of our singers’ favorites from winter concerts over the years. Many of these picks come from our first two winter concerts–Sweet Was the Song (2019) and The Town Lay Hushed (2020). While our first concert was in 2016, we only performed during summer breaks until 2018-19, thanks to a generous donation from a family member of one of our singers.

Tonight’s highlights originally programmed for our first winter concert, include a famous Praetorius chorale tune, Stefan Claas’ contemporary setting of a German carol, and Morten Lauriden’s timeless O Magnum Mysterium. We look back to our second winter program with Herbert Howells’s much-beloved A Spotless Rose, and a lesser-known Ave Maria written by a contemporary of Howells, violist Rebecca Clarke. It’s been particularly interesting for us to reflect on these concerts, as The Town Lay Hushed was our last program before the covid pandemic, and our last before moving fully to a professional choir model.

Our time away from public performances was bookended by winter concerts. We returned to the stage in our 2021 program, Traditions Renewed. In homage to this program, we revisit Joanna Marsh’s In Winter’s House, originally written as a companion piece for Benjamin Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols. This piece is a favorite for many of our singers, and one I believe will be a staple in the winter choral canon for years to come. 

True to form, we’ve combined these singer picks with new and exciting works alongside a handful of classics, including Howells’s collection of carol-anthems. Sally Beamish, yet another British violist-composer, sets a beautifully simple meditation on the peace of a small church on a snowy Christmas night in her piece In the Stillness. Reena Esmail’s A Winter Breviary marries texts following the canonical hours of evensong, matins, and lauds with the music of Hindustani raags for those same hours. We end tonight with a celebratory, at times even raucous, sound in Ken Burton’s Many are the Wonders, which also includes an innovative musical depiction of many tongues praising the wonder of God.

Tonight’s program in some sense centers on Howells’s carol-anthems. While choral enthusiasts may know the famed Three Carol-Anthems written early in Howells’s career, there is a fourth carol-anthem, written about thirty years after the publication of his first three. Long, Long Ago may not be nearly as well known as his first three, but is certainly worthy of acclaim, perhaps even rising above the earlier carol-anthems. I encourage you to read more about this incredible music in the program notes.

I would particularly like to thank Thomas Rust, our Associate Artistic Director, and Anya Trudeau, our Social Media Manager, who, besides their standard duties as board members and singers, also made significant contributions to tonight’s program, particularly the second half.

Once again, we find ourselves enjoying the privilege of preparing and performing beautiful music, surrounded by (and thanks to) an incredible and supportive community—our singers, other musicians, and listeners like you.If you enjoy tonight’s concert and are able to do so, please make a donation today. Your donations ensure Lux’s future ability to present concerts and projects like this, and much more. We have our sights set on expanding our educational programming, improving compensation for our incredible performers, and much more. We need your support now more than ever as we embark on these very exciting projects.

Our ushers can accept cash or checks for donation after the concert. You can also donate by credit/debit card at the merchandise table after the concert or online here. Checks should be made out to Lux Choir, Inc. Lux is a 501(c)(3) organization. Donations are tax deductible. In addition, if you’re interested in becoming a financial partner by more fully funding our educational programs or sponsoring a concert, please speak to us after the concert or contact us here. We would love for you to be a part of our work!

Please don’t forget to say hello after the concert! Whether this is your twentieth Lux concert or your first (of many, I hope!), we really would love to meet you. We all so much enjoy getting to meet new friends and see old ones, too. I hope you enjoy the concert. We’re so glad you’re here.

~Robby Napoli

Save the date

Tuesday, March 11, 2025, Lux will be joined by the TUKS Camerata, the premier choir of the University of Pretoria in South Africa, on their USA tour. Details to come. Subscribe to our mailing list or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, or Bluesky for more information. We hope you will join us!

Herbert Howells (1892-1983)

Long, Long Ago

Performance details

Collin Power, soloist

About the work

Herbert Howells was a British composer, organist, and teacher, known for a large and beloved output of Anglican church music. Howells grew up without much means, but was able to begin music lessons at 13 thanks to a local politician who’d taken an interest in his organ playing at the local Baptist church. While studying with famed British composers like Charles Villiers Stanford and Hubert Parry, much of Howells’s music was orchestral. Later in his career, Howells found stability in an organist position at St. John’s College, Cambridge, which also led directly to many of the works for which he is most remembered.

Long, Long Ago was written during Howells’s prime while at St. John’s College, chronologically bookended by an introit for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II (Behold O God our Defender) and his greatest critical success (Hymnus Paradisi). The text was written by John Buxton in 1940 while a prisoner of war in Bavaria. Howells’s unison, almost chant-like opening line hearkens back to the musical styles of “long ago” referenced in the text. Adding to the homage to older music, we also hear false relations throughout, including the altos’ G-natural as they first take charge of the melody, overtop the tenors’ G-sharp. As he moves fluidly from E minor to A dorian, we get a harmonically rare moment from Howells as he depicts “God’s son” with a bright, A major triad with only an added ninth—a sound that would become commonplace in the generation of choral composers to follow. Listeners may also notice shockingly unprepared dissonances at each iteration of the world’s “woe”, and militaristically dotted rhythms at “making wars to cease”. The piece ends with a cadence rivaling that of his famed A Spotless Rose, which is sung later this evening: beginning in Howells’s patented mode, the cadence grows to a climax which twists and turns through C-sharp minor harmonies, only to arrive finally at an inevitably simple final two measures, resting on a picardy third of the same E minor in which the piece began. 

Text

Long, long ago, Oh! so long ago
Christ was born in Bethlehem to heal the world's woe.

His mother in the stable watched him where he lay
And knew for all his frailty he was the world's stay.
(Long, long ago, Christ was born in Bethlehem, long ago.)
 
While he lay there sleeping in the quiet night
She listened to his breathing and oh! her heart was light.
 
Long, long ago, Oh! so long ago
Christ was born to heal the world's woe.

She tended him and nursed him, giving him her breast,
and knew that it was God’s son in her crook’d arm at rest.
 
Long, long ago, Oh! so long ago
Christ was born in Bethlehem to heal the world's woe.
Shepherds at the sheepfolds knew him for their King;
And gold and myrrh and frankincense three wise men did bring.
 
Long, long ago, Oh! so long ago
Christ was born to heal the world's woe.

For he should be the Saviour, making wars to cease,
who gives joy to all men, and brings to them peace.

Long, long ago, Oh! so long ago
Christ was born in Bethlehem to heal the world's woe.
John Buxton (1912-1989)

Sally Beamish (b. 1956)

In the stillness

About the work

Sally Beamish began her musical career as a violist with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields and the London Sinfonietta. She was also a founding member of the Raphael Ensemble. In 1990, she moved away from performing to devote herself to composition. Beamish returned to performing in 2015 after her daughter, a luthier, built her a viola. 

In the stillness sets a contemporary Christmas text by Katrina Shepherd. Beamish writes: “This short carol beautifully captures the hushed rapture of a small parish church in a snowbound landscape, just before Christmas.” She treats Shepherd’s words with aptly simple, strophic, music filled with subtle shifts to reflect the text. Towards the end of the first verse, Beamish modulates from G major down to C major to shift the singers lower in their range, painting an even more vivid picture of the choir which “softly sings” at the start of the second verse. Where Shepherd breaks the poem’s pattern in the penultimate line, Beamish introduces a new melody, paralleling the shift in the text. 

Text

In the stillness of a church
Where candles glow,
In the softness of a fall
Of fresh white snow,

In the brightness of the stars
That shine this night,
In the calmness of a pool
Of healing light,

In the clearness of a choir
That softly sings,
In the oneness of a hush
Of angels' wings,

In the mildness of a night
By stable bare,
In the quietness of a lull
Near cradle fair,

There's a patience as we wait
For a new morn,
And the presence of a child
Soon to be born.
Katrina Shepherd

Michael Praetorius (1571-1621)

Es ist ein Ros entsprungen

About the work

Last performed: Sweet Was the Song, January 2019
Recorded on: My Lord Has Come (2019)

Michael Praetorius was a composer and organist of the German renaissance period. The son of a Lutheran pastor, he is credited with significant contributions to Protestant hymnody. His first published compositions appeared around 1602, almost 15 years after beginning his work as a church organist. Even from his first motets, the influence of the growing Venetian school is clear, eventually leading him to develop the polychoral chorale concerto form.

Though the author of this text is unknown, we do know that this Christmas hymn first appeared in print in 1599. Based on the text of Isaiah 11:1, the text references Isaiah’s foretelling of the birth of Jesus. The melody, which can also be sung as a canon, has been used as the base for many choral and instrumental works, including one of Brahms’s 11 Chorale Preludes, Op. 122. This version, the most popular harmonization, was written in 1609 and published in Praetorius’s sixth book of sacred music. This hymn is more commonly known to English speakers as “Lo, How A Rose E’er Blooming,” also translated by Catherine Winkworth as “A Spotless Rose.”

Text

Es ist ein Ros entsprungen aus einer Wurzel zart,
wie uns die Alten sungen, von Jesse kam die Art
und hat ein Blümlein bracht
mitten im kalten Winter wohl zu der halben Nacht.

Das Röslein, das ich meine, davon Jesaia sagt,
hat uns gebracht alleine Marie, die reine Magd.
Aus Gottes ewgem Rat
hat sie ein Kind geboren wohl zu der halben Nacht.

Das Blümelein so kleine, das duftet uns so süẞ,
mit seinem hellen Scheine vertreibts die Finsternis.
Wahr’ Mensch und wahrer Gott,
hilft uns aus allem Leide, rettet von Sünd und Tod.
Anonymous

Translation

Lo, how a rose e’er blooming from tender stem hath sprung!
Of Jesse’s lineage coming, as men of old have sung.
It came, a floweret bright,
Amid the cold of winter, when half spent was the night.

Isaiah ’twas foretold it, the rose I have in mind;
With Mary we behold it, the virgin mother kind.
To show God’s love aright,
She bore to men a savior, when half spent was the night.

O Flower, whose fragrance tender with sweetness fills the air,
Dispel with glorious splendor the darkness everywhere;
True man, yet very God,
From sin and death now save us, and share our every load.
Theodore Baker

Joanna Marsh (b. 1970)

In Winter’s House

About the work

Last performed: Traditions Renewed, January 2023

Joanna Marsh’s choral setting of Jane Draycott’s poem “In Winter’s House” was commissioned by Tenebrae as a companion piece to A Ceremony of Carols by Benjamin Britten. The vocal range of the piece sits quite low, calling for an ensemble of altos, tenors, baritones, and basses, which adds to the imagery of a dark, winter scene so beautifully depicted in Draycott’s poem. There is no set, consistent meter, which adds a freedom to the textual expression of the piece. Text painting is used frequently —the sparse, low harmonies on the text “cold as steel,” a stunning high F major triad on the word “gleams,” and the descending, lilting melody on the word “rain” are just a few examples. 

The tone of the poem shifts in the third stanza. While the first two stanzas illustrate the cold, less-welcoming qualities of winter, the third stanza introduces a “child asleep in a dream of light.” Correspondingly, the music here introduces higher and “brighter” harmonies on the words “light” and “flame” (both on a B-flat major chord). The fourth stanza continues with a fiery theme (“of fire that catches and travels for miles”) where the music becomes more animated with an ascending line, as if to illustrate a fire spreading, arriving on a shimmering G major chord on the word “miles.” In this piece, Marsh and Draycott have succeeded in bringing text and music together to create not just a story, but a wintery scene and emotional tapestry upon which the story is told. 

Text

In winter’s house there’s a room
that’s pale and still as mist in a field
while outside in every street every gate’s shut firm,
every face as cold as steel.

In winter’s house there’s a bed
that is spread with frost and feathers, that gleams
in the half-light like rain in a disused yard
or a pearl in a choked-up stream.

In winter’s house there’s a child
asleep in a dream of light that grows out
of the dark, a flame you can hold in your hand
like a flower or a torch on the street.

In winter’s house there’s a tale
that’s told of a great chandelier in a garden,
of fire that catches and travels for miles,
of all gates and windows wide open.

In winter’s house there’s a flame
being dreamt by a child in the night
in the small quiet house at the turn in the lane
where the darkness gives way to light.
Jane Draycott (b. 1954)

Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)

Ave Maria

About the work

Last performed: The Town Lay Hushed, January 2020
Recorded on: The Town Lay Hushed (2020)

Violist and composer Rebecca Clarke is most known for her instrumental chamber works, particularly her Piano Trio and Viola Sonata—her choral compositions are relatively unknown. This Ave Maria was published in 1937, around the time Clarke began exploring the registers and timbres of the treble voice; it was her first published choral work. The setting uses modal scales and Renaissance techniques to pay tribute to the history of the text. The particular version of the Marian prayer Clarke chose to set contains some alternative text, the source of which is unknown—but it has also been set by other composers such as Josquin des Prez and Tomás Luis de Victoria, as well as by Ola Gjeilo in a setting titled Second Eve, which we have also performed before.

Text

Ave Maria, gratia plena
Dominus tecum.
Benedicta tu in mulieribus
Et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Jesus.

Sancta Maria, Regina Coeli,
dulcis et pia, O Mater Dei,
ora pro nobis peccatoribus,
ut cum electis te videamus. Amen.
Traditional

Translation

Hail Mary, full of Grace,
the Lord is with you.
Blessed are you among women
And blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus.

Holy Mary, Queen of Heaven,
sweet and merciful, O Mother of God,
pray for us sinners,
that with the chosen we may see you.

Reena Esmail (b. 1983)

A Winter Breviary

About the work

Reena Esmail is a highly celebrated composer, receiving performances from orchestras, choirs, and chamber ensembles across the world. She is the Los Angeles Master Chorale’s 2020-2025 Artist in Residence, and has been in residence with Tanglewood Music Center, Spoleto Festival, and Seattle Symphony. Her work in composition and academia often explore the marriage of Hindustani and Western Classical music. 

From the composer: “This set of three carols, on new texts by poet Rebecca Gayle Howell, traces a journey through the solstice, the longest night of the year. The texts follow the canonical hours of Evensong, Matins and Lauds, and the music maps onto Hindustani raags* for those same hours (Raag Hamasadhwani, Malkauns, and Ahir Bhairav). This set is a meeting of cultures, and of the many ways we honor the darkness, and celebrate the return of light.”

*A raag, or rāga, is a melodic framework for improvisation in Indian classical music, akin to a melodic scale or mode in Western classical music. More than just a set of notes, each rāga comes with unique rules of varying levels of freedom or prescription.

1. We Look For You (Evensong — Raag Hamsadhwani)

The first piece of Esmail’s set makes use of the Raag Hamasadhwani, which translates “the cry of the swan”. This rāga was created by the Carnatic composer Ramaswami Dikshitar (1735-1817), and was popularized by Amir Khan, a performer of Hindustani classical music. The rāga makes use of a pentatonic scale, though not the traditional pentatonic scale we might associate with early folk music of the United States–here, we have scale degrees one, two, three, five, and seven, where the aforementioned pentatonic scale would substitute the sixth scale degree in place of the seventh.

Esmail of course takes more than the rāga into account in her writing—when the text transitions from eventide to dusking hour, the choir shifts to a new key center with lines that descend as the sun at its setting. 

Text

Eventide, our single star, 
One looking star, this night.
Next to me, the sparrow hen,
Two pilgrims small and bold.
Dusking hour, that lonely hour
The sky dims blue to grey.
Our forest road will fade,
We look for You.
Pines glisten wet with sleet,
She looks with me, 
We look for You.
Fog falls in
So close, my breath,
She looks with me,
We look for You:
Great Silent One Unseen,
We look for You.
Eventide, our single star, 
One looking star, this night.
We look for You,
Forgiving light, our guide.
Rebecca Gayle Howell (b. 1975)

2. The Year’s Midnight (Matins — Raag Malkauns)

Esmail bases the second work of Winter Breviary on the Raag Malkauns. Malkauns is translated “he who wears serpents like garlands,” in reference to Shiva, a Hindu God. The story goes that Shiva was inconsolable after his wife, Sati, sacrificed herself to uphold his honor against her father, who opposed their marriage, and that this rāga was created by the goddess Parvati in an effort to calm Shiva. Malkauns employs a minor pentatonic scale, notated in Western classical music as scale degrees one, three, four, six, and seven. The lack of scale degree five is particularly notable, as it is so typically a harmonic pillar in the Western idiom with which Esmail writes this piece. Her fluency in both styles allows her to write it in a way that feels natural to most listeners.

In her setting of Howell’s words, Esmail honors the solitary nature of the text throughout the piece by leaving the primary theme relatively exposed–it is slow-moving, and mostly accompanied with sparse, static harmonies.

Text

The longest night is come,
A matins for beasts, they low, they kneel, 
O, their sleep, their psalm sung.
A matins for trees, they slow, they stem,
O, their reach, their psalm won.
Hush, hush, 
Can I hear them?
Can I hear what is not said?
Hush, hush, 
Can I hear You?
Ev'ry need met.
To light, the path is dark,
Our star has gone.
Beneath my feet a year of leaves fallen, frozen, done.
I walk these woods,
The longest night is come,
Above me, the sparrow, 
She brings our new seed home.
Brown true sparrow,
Take tomorrow home.
Rebecca Gayle Howell (b. 1975)

3. The Unexpected Early Hour (Lauds — Raag Ahir Bhairav)

In this last, much more upbeat movement, Esmail is influenced by the Raag Ahir Bhairav. This rāga is a mixture of the Bhairav, typically performed in the morning or at the beginning of concerts, and the ancient and more rare Ahiri, also considered an early-morning scale. While the last two pieces use different pentatonic scales, this makes use of seven scale degrees–a major scale with a flattened second and seventh scale degree.

In keeping with the rest of her writing, Esmail uses her music to enhance the words to which it is set. She treats this morning-text with a jaunty and exciting feel, only shifting the pitch center at “Earth’s Untired Change”.

Text

Praise be! praise be!
The dim, the dun, the dark withdraws
Our recluse morning's found.
The river's alive
The clearing provides
Lie down, night sky,  lie down.
I feel the cold wind leaving, gone,
I feel the frost's relief.
My tracks in the snow can still be erased
In us, the sun believes.
Winter is, Winter ends,

So the true bird calls.
The rocks cry out
My bones cry out
All the trees applaud.
Ev'ry hard thing lauds.
Lie down, night sky, lie down.
I know the seeding season comes,
I know the ground will spring.
My fate is not night
I don't need to try
Behold! The dawn, within.
Horizon lights across my thoughts,
Horizon lines redraw.
Inside of my throat a rise of the gold
Inside my chest I thaw.
Winter is, Winter ends,
Nothing stays the same.
The moon strikes high,
The sun strikes high and
Now I hear your name:
Earth's Untired Change.
Praise be! praise be!
The unexpected early hour
grows the good light long.
Our darkness ends,
O mercy sun, 
Trust can warm us all.
Begin again, again, again,
O may our day begin!
Rebecca Gayle Howell (b. 1975)

Intermission 15m

Ended

Herbert Howells (1892-1983)

Three Carol-Anthems

Performance details

Collin Power, soloist for A Spotless Rose

About the work

After contracting Graves’ disease in 1915, Howells struggled financially as he required constant trips between London and Lydney for treatment. In 1917, his friends arranged for a grant to pay for Howells to assist Richard Terry at Westminster Cathedral, editing the Latin Tudor repertoire Terry and his choir were reviving. Through this work, Howells studied and absorbed the English Renaissance style he came to imbue in his own compositional style, and soon got to work on his first choral works to be significantly performed: Three Carol-Anthems. The pieces were written in consecutive years between 1918 and 1920, and they grow more musically adventurous with each year.

1. Here is the Little Door

The most humble of this set, Here is the Little Door describes with quiet wonder the arrival of the Magi at the crib, using a text usually ascribed to Frances Chesterton. Taking note of the text in his strophic setting, Howells paints the picture of swirling incense with his imposition of what would become known as the “Howells scale” at “incense with clouds about his head.” While this piece is, in effect, two strophic verses, Howells takes great care to make changes to fit not just the syllabification of the text to the tune, but also to reflect the text in the music-making; for example, in the second verse, he changes the rhythm of the tune to reflect the “battle red”.

Text

Here is the little door,
lift up the latch, oh lift!
We need not wander more,
but enter with our gift;
Our gift of finest gold.
Gold that was never bought or sold;
Myrrh to be strewn about his bed;
Incense in clouds about His head;
All for the child that stirs not in His sleep,
But holy slumber hold with ass and sheep.

Bend low about His bed,
For each He has a gift;
See how His eyes awake,
Lift up your hands, O lift!
For gold, He gives a keen-edged sword.
(Defend with it thy little Lord!)
For incense, smoke of battle red,
Myrrh for the honored happy dead;
Gifts for His children, terrible and sweet;
Touched by such tiny hands,
and, oh, such tiny feet.
Frances Chesterton (1869-1938)

2. A Spotless Rose

Last performed: The Town Lay Hushed, January 2020

By far the most celebrated of the Three Carol-Anthems, this movement uses Winkworth’s translation of the German text famously set by Michael Praetorius. (We performed that version in the first half of this evening’s program.) He evokes the wind which blows the proverbial spotless rose in the text with long, smoothly flowing lines through time-changes that the Royal School of Church Music says “confounded the choir of King’s Cambridge in early performances.” In the second verse, the ‘wind’ calms to make room for a soaring baritone solo before it picks back up in the final verse. The flowing slows once more for one of the most beloved moments in Howells’s oeuvre: a closing phrase, of which composer Patrick Hadley famously told Howells, “I should like, when my time comes, to pass away with that magical cadence.”

Text

A Spotless Rose is blowing,
Sprung from a tender root,
Of ancient seers' foreshowing,
Of Jesse promised fruit;
Its fairest bud unfolds to light
Amid the cold, cold winter,
And in the dark midnight.

The Rose which I am singing,
Whereof Isaiah said,
Is from its sweet root springing
In Mary, purest Maid;
Through God's great love and might
The Blessed Babe she bare us
In a cold, cold winter's night.
“Es ist ein Ros entsprungen,” Traditional German, trans. Catherine Winkworth (1827-1878)

3. Sing Lullaby

Last performed: Sweet was The Song, January 2019
Recorded on: My Lord Has Come (2019)

Of this movement, Howells writes, “This was the third in the set. Here too a poet found the verses for me. F.W. Harvey, the Gloucestershire poet, friend of Ivor Gurney had written and published the poem only a short time before this setting was made.” The beginning of the piece creates a soothing, lulling theme above the basses’ melody, maybe even borrowing from the previous year’s carol-anthem, A Spotless Rose. This first theme is contrasted by the treatment of the second stanza of the poem, where the new mode and first bass notes below the staff reflect the textual shift.

Text

Sing lullaby, sing lullaby,
while snow doth gently fall,
sing lullaby to Jesus
born in an oxen-stall.

Sing lullaby to Jesus,
born now in Bethlehem,
the naked blackthorn’s growing
to weave his diadem.

Sing lullaby, sing lullaby
while thickly snow doth fall,
sing lullaby to Jesus
the Saviour of all.
Frederick William Harvey (1888-1957)

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)

1. Weihnachten

from Sechs Spruche, Op. 79

About the work

Felix Mendelssohn was one of the most celebrated composers of the early German Romantic period. He and his sister, Fanny, were famously child prodigies–while he only lived to 38, his output still rivals those of composers who lived much fuller lives. He was known for being among the first to look back to the masters who came before him, heavily influenced by his time with the Berliner Singakademie, dedicated to building community and reviving great music of the past.

Weihnachten comes from his Six Motets, Op. 79. While the motets were published posthumously in 1850, the pieces were written between 1843-1846, with Weihnachten written in 1845, two years before his death. The piece is written for eight-part choir, and he sets the “hallelujahs” in an antiphonal, double-choir setting. This exuberant setting reflects the text, rejoicing in the coming of the promised Redeemer.

Text

Frohlocket, ihr Völker auf Erden und preiset Gott!
Der Heiland ist erschienen, den der Herr verheißen.
Er hat seine Gerechtigkeit der Welt offenbaret, Halleluja!

Martin Luther; based on Psalm 98

Translation

Rejoice, ye people of the earth, and praise God!
The redeemer is come, whom the Lord has promised.
He has revealed his justice to the world. Hallelujah!

David Briggs (b. 1962)

Set me as a seal

About the work

David Briggs is a British composer and organist, regarded as one of the world’s finest improvisers. Formerly the organist of Truro and Gloucester Cathedrals, he now works as a concert organist and composer of choral and organ music. His daughter is also a noted composer, Kerensa Briggs.

Written for a wedding in 2011, Briggs’s Set me as a seal is an impassioned setting of this oft-used love text. He builds drama throughout by starting with all voices together, and interrupting the homophony with smaller sections of the choir passing the text back-and-forth until they return to each other at the peak of the phrase. The piece winds through key areas with an impressive ease, flowing much like the “many waters” of the text, before settling in a distant F-sharp major.

Text

Set me as a seal upon thine heart,
set me as a seal upon thine arm.
For love is stronger than death.
Many waters cannot quench love,
neither can the floods drown it.
For love is stronger than death.
Song of Solomon

Morten Lauridsen (b. 1943)

O magnum mysterium

About the work

Last performed: Sweet was The Song, January 2019
Recorded on: My Lord Has Come (2019)

Morten Lauridsen is one of the most widely performed choral composers alive today. He served as composer-in-residence for the Los Angeles Master Chorale from 1994 to 2001, and taught at the USC Thornton School of Music from 1967-2019. Lauridsen was named an “American Choral Master” by the National Endowment for the Arts, and received a National Medal of Arts from the president for his contributions to the choral arts. 

One of the most captivating and well-known choral pieces by a living composer, Morten Lauridsen’s O Magnum Mysterium is a serene setting of a common Christmas text, perfectly depicting the “great mystery” of Jesus’s birth. The piece, written for the L.A. Master Chorale, is filled with examples of text-painting, though its most striking use comes on the word ‘virgo’. Lauridsen writes here a note outside of the key–a G-sharp in the alto, the only note of this sort in the entire piece–used very specifically in this instance to foreshadow the Virgin Mary’s pain at her son’s crucifixion years after his birth.

Text

O magnum mysterium,
et admirabile sacramentum
ut animalia viderent Dominum natum,
jacentem in praesepio!
Beata Virgo, cujus viscera
meruerent portare Dominum Christum.
Alleluia!
Traditional

Translation

O great mystery,
and wondrous sacrament,
that animals should see the newborn Lord,
lying in their manger!
Blessed is the Virgin whose womb
was worthy to bear the Lord Christ.
Alleluia!

Traditional German, arr. Stefan Claas (b. 1950)

Maria durch ein Dornwald ging

About the work

Last performed: Sweet was The Song, January 2019
Recorded on: My Lord Has Come (2019)

Born in Bayreuth, Stefan Claas studied church music and choral conducting in Munich and Frankfurt. He was conductor of the chamber choir Ars Antiqua Aschaffenburg, winning several prizes and competitions nationally and internationally alongside them. In 2012, they won the City of Aschaffenburg’s Culture Prize for their exemplary work with young talent. 

Maria durch ein Dornwald ging is a German Christmas carol of murky origins, first published no later than 1850. Stefan Claas’s setting of his home country’s carol sets three verses, first featuring just the tenors and basses, then only the sopranos and altos, and finally the full choir in the last verse. This final verse begins in unison, gradually peeling off into a robust major chord on the Greek liturgical phrase “Kyrie eleison”–”Lord, have mercy.”

Text

Maria durch ein Dornwald ging,
Kyrie eleison.
Maria durch ein Dornwald ging,
der hat in sieben Jahrn kein Laub getragen.
Jesus und Maria.

Was trug Maria unter ihrem Herzen?
Kyrie eleison.
Ein kleines Kindlein ohne Schmerzen,
das trug Maria unter ihrem Herzen.
Jesus und Maria.

Da haben die Dornen Rosen getragen,
Kyrie eleison.
Als das Kindlein durch den Wald getragen,
da haben die Dornen Rosen getragen.
Jesus und Maria.
Traditional

Translation

Maria walks amid the thorns,
Kyrie eleison [ie, Lord, have mercy]
Maria walks amid the thorns,
Which seven years no leaf has born.
Jesus and Mary.

What beneath her heart doth Mary bear?
Kyrie eleison,
The little Child doth Mary bear,
Beneath her heart He nestles there.
Jesus and Mary.

Lo! roses on the thorns appear!
Kyrie eleison,
As the two are passing near,
Lo! roses on the thorns appear!
Jesus and Mary.

Ken Burton (b. 1970)

Many are the Wonders (Reflection on Tallis’ ‘Loquebantur’)

Performance details

John Logan Wood, soloist

About the work

Ken Burton, a British composer, performer, producer, and presenter, is widely known for his appearances on UK television programs like BBC1’s Songs of Praise. He has conducted and directed choirs for major films, most notably for Black Panther. Growing up, Burton engaged with a wide array of music-making, including Western classical, steel pan, and gospel. His music often draws on these experiences, combining an array of musical styles, most often gospel and Western classical.

Many are The Wonders was commissioned by Suzi Digby and the Ora Singers as a modern reflection of Thomas Tallis’ Loquebantur. The composer writes, “The Latin text in the Tallis setting tells of the apostles declaring the wonders of God in different languages (or ‘tongues’) on the day of Pentecost. This reflection brings the account into the first person, using a variety of musical languages. In the incipit, the soloist… has permission to further embellish, and slightly flatten the third degree of the scale as in jazz/gospel/spirituals. Likewise, the first choral response, which should have a freedom of expression in keeping with the church of the American Deep South, hence the ‘Hallelujah’ version of the word (which is later ‘Alleluia’). 

“The long Alleluias at bar 49, subsequently bar 62, represent the ‘declaring of the wonders in different tongues’... Each of the seven parts is based on a different scale… As with music of the Renaissance, the superimposition of different modes creates a subtle harmonic tension, when major thirds and minor thirds coincide.”

Text

Oh my Lord, open my lips, and my mouth will declare thy praise. Hallelujah!
Many, oh Lord my God, are the wonders you have done.

My tongue shall sing aloud!
Many, oh Lord my God, are the wonders you have done.

My tongue shall declare thy praise,
Declare thy praise and sing aloud.
Alleluia!

Open my mouth, and my tongue shall declare thy praise.
Alleluia!
Psalm 51:15, Psalm 35:28, and Psalm 40:5

Performers

Soprano

  • Austin Nikirk
  • Melodia Mae Rinaldi
  • Abigail Winston
  • Beth Ann Zinkievich

Alto

  • Ariana Parks
  • Kimberly Parr
  • Arden Titus
  • Anya Trudeau

Tenor

  • John Mullan
  • John Richardson
  • John-Paul Teti
  • John Logan Wood

Bass

  • Ciaran Cain
  • Shreyas Patel
  • Collin Power
  • Thomas Rust
  • Han Wagner

Donors

Donor (up to $120)

  • Frank Albinder
  • Krista Anderson
  • John Barnes
  • James Brosnihan
  • Joe Drach
  • Nicole Katsikides
  • Marty Kluh
  • Carolyn & Willard Larkin
  • Linda Rigsby
  • Allan & Jaime Ryskind
  • Zachary Seid
  • Kathleen Stauder
  • John Sullivan
  • Susan & Jim Turk
  • Steven Williams
  • Edwin Williamson

Patron ($120+)

  • The Ison Family
  • Lenka Shallbetter
  • Maureen Straut
  • Stephen Titus

Benefactor ($240+)

  • Denise Eggers
  • Luke Frels
  • Frank & Kathy Napoli
  • Margaret Rood
  • Charles Russell
  • Tricia Rust
  • Dennis & Rebecca Teti

Singer Sponsor ($1020+)

  • Robby Napoli
  • John-Paul & Elizabeth Teti