Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten (
sample (help·info)) is a short canon written in 1977 in A minor by the Estonian composer of classical music Arvo Pärt (b. 1935) for string orchestra and bell. Cantus is an early example of Pärt's own tintinnabuli style, which he based on his reactions to early chant music. The work's initial appeal is often ascribed to its relative simplicity; a single melodic motif dominates and it both begins and ends with scored silence. However, as the critic Ivan Hewett observes, while it "may be simple in concept...the concept produces a tangle of lines which is hard for the ear to unravel. And even where the music really is simple in its audible features, the expressive import of those features is anything but."[1] A typical performance lasts about six and a half minutes.[2]
The cantus was composed as an elegy to mourn the December 1976 death of the English composer Benjamin Britten. Pärt greatly admired Britten, whom he described as possessing the "unusual purity" that he himself sought as a composer.[3] Part viewed the Englishman as a kindred spirit; however, he only gained access to the latter's music in 1980, after emigrating from Soviet Estonia to Austria, four years after Britten had died.[2] When Britten passed, Pärt felt that he had lost hope of meeting the only contemporary composer whose musical outlook, he believed, resembled his own.
While Pärt is known primarily for his religious music, Cantus is a fully secular work, in that it forms a spare lament to a fellow composer and is not based on traditional, biblical texts. It is perhaps Pärt's most popular piece, and a 1997 recording by the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra conducted by Tamas Benedekand has been widely distributed. Due to its evocative and cinematic feel, the piece has been used extensively as background accompaniment in both film and television documentaries.[4]
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Composition
Overview
The cantus is scored for string orchestra and bells (only a single chime is used, on the pitch A, the tonal centre of the piece). Cantus is an example of Pärt's tintinnabuli style, using only the pitches of a single A minor scale.[2] This work is based on a very simple idea, a descending A minor scale, and is in the form of a prolation canon, an old technique which Pärt also uses in the work Festina Lente (Hurry slowly). It is in 6/4 meter and alternates long and short notes.[5]
Pärt has said of "tintinnabulation": "The complex and many-faceted only confuses me, and I must search for unity. What is it, this one thing, and how do I find my way to it? Traces of this perfect thing appear in many guises — and everything that is unimportant falls away. Tintinnabulation is like this. Here I am alone with silence. I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is beautifully played. This one note, or a silent beat, or a moment of silence, comforts me."[6]
Each part except the viola is split into two, with one playing notes from the A minor scale, and the other playing only notes from an A minor chord (i.e., A–C–E). These choices have a definite symbolism for Pärt. The latter "always signifies the subjective world, the daily egoistic life of sin and suffering, [the former] meanwhile, is the objective realm of forgiveness."[7] For Pärt, there is only an apparent dualism here; he believes that "all is one."[8] Music is very good at demonstrating the combining disparate elements to make something greater than the sum of the parts — this music seems to exemplify the principle.
The A natural minor scale has some historical connections. Before major and minor scales became prevalent in Western art music, music, especially the early liturgical music that has been so influential on Pärt, used a system of modes. These modes were known to the ancient Greeks, and each was said to have a specific character which could strongly affect the mind, although we no longer know for sure which modes the Greeks were using. The church modes are formed by using the notes of the C major scale (i.e., the white keys on a piano) but starting at different notes in each mode. A scale of A with no black keys is in the Aeolian mode. Since all natural minor scales derive from the white keys on the piano played from A to A, in choosing the A minor scale Pärt is acknowledging his debt to early church music, or at least affirming his affinity with it.
Score
After the three beats of silence that open the score, a tubular bell is struck three times very quietly (pianissimo), with 12 beats between the strikes and gap of 18 beats between the groups of three. This bell tells of the death of Britten—it is the funeral bell. It continues to be struck in groups of three widely spaced intervals for most of the piece, fading out for a time in the last 21 bars, only to reappear at the last. After the bell has struck there is a brief pause for three beats of silence, and then the first violins begin setting the pattern which the rest of the ensemble will follow at slower speeds. Half of the first violins begin playing the descending A minor scale, playing first one note from the very top of their range, then returning to the beginning and playing two notes, and then three and four and so on. The other half of the violins play notes from an A minor chord. These notes start a fourth lower and drop in pitch only when it is over run by the first. This creates a swirling effect of increasing tension which is relieved by dropping the note. They begin playing very quietly (pianissimissimo) but gradually over the piece build up until they are playing very loudly (fortissimissimo).
The second violins play exactly the same but an octave lower and at half the speed, which means they play 6 beats (one bar) of silence to begin, and appear to enter at the beginning of the second bar. Then the violas, which are the only voice not doubled, join in at quarter speed and another octave lower, the cellos at one eighth, and finally the contrabasses as one sixteenth. The basses are then playing each long note for 32 beats, and each short note for 16, meaning that the piece requires enormous concentration.
After an initial phase which feels unstable and off center, perhaps even off key at times, the piece settles down, and as the sequences of notes begin to grow longer the various rhythms and pulses become more evident. Cantus has a kaleidoscopic feel at times, but once it becomes established there is a definite questing downwards, with long culminating string chords making a final descent into silence.[3]
At bar 65 the first violins hit middle C, and when they do they cease playing the A minor scale and simply play C continuously until the end of the piece (i.e., for more than 250 beats). Eleven bars later the second violins hit a low A and play that continuously. Similarly the other voices gradually find the note that they have been seeking and once reached, they play it continuously until the end. The last to lock into place are the contrabasses which alight on a low A in bar 103. At this stage the whole ensemble is playing an A minor chord very very loudly, and this continues for five bars, then on the second beat of the last bar they suddenly stop. At that moment the bell is struck very quietly (pianissimo) so that the striking itself is not heard, but only the reverberations as it dies away. As the final bell toll reverberates, with all other instruments silent, the overtones of the bell become prominently audible — in particular, the fourth overtone[citation needed] (fifth partial), which is the note C-sharp, i.e., the major third of the fundamental pitch (A) of the entire piece. This creates a striking effect, as the entire piece is set in the key of A minor, so that in the dying echoes of the final bell, the last thing the listener hears is actually an A major chord contained within the overtones of the bell. This evokes the common Renaissance and Baroque technique called the "Picardy third", in which a piece set in a minor mode or key nonetheless ends on a major chord, evoking a ray of light piercing through the clouds, and suggesting hope, resurrection, or redemption. Here, however, the effect is supremely subtle, because it arises solely from the overtones of a single strike of the bell, rather than from separate instruments or voices.
Theme
The piece is a meditation on death. Pärt's biographer, Paul Hillier, suggests that "how we live depends on our relationship with death: how we make music depends on our relationship to silence."[7] It is significant that the piece begins and ends with silence—that the silence is written in the score. What this means is that although the various instruments appear to enter progressively, they are actually "playing" right from the start. This silence creates a frame around the piece and can be seen as having a religious or spiritual significance. It suggests that we come from silence, and return to silence; it reminds us that before we were born and after we die we are silent with respect to this world.
Speaking on his reaction to the death of Britten, Pärt said,
- Why did the date of Benjamin Britten's death – December 4, 1976 – touch such a chord in me? During this time I was obviously at the point where I could recognize the magnitude of such a loss. Inexplicable feelings of guilt, more than that even, arose in me. I had just discovered Britten for myself. Just before his death I began to appreciate the unusual purity of his music – I had had the impression of the same kind of purity in the ballads of Guillaume de Machaut. And besides, for a long time I had wanted to meet Britten personally – and now it would not come to that.[9]
Reception
The opening bars of this music were used by Michael Moore in his 2004 film Fahrenheit 9/11,[4] during the scene showing the aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Center. The Cantus also appears twice in the 1996 film Mother Night, based on the novel by Kurt Vonnegut; and is used in BBC's Spooks, during a scene set in the Priory Church of St Bartholomew-the-Great in London. The piece was extensively used in the docu-drama movie Hiroshima. It signified the death of President Roosevelt, the Americans dead on Okinawa, and the aftermaths of both the atomic bombing of Hiroshima (being played over a montage of victims of the attack and the aircrew of the Enola Gay being given medals and talking about their impressions of the event) and the destruction of Tokyo in repeated fire-bombings.
The American choreographer Ulysses Dove used the piece for his choreography Dancing on the Front Porch of Heaven, created in 1993 for the Royal Swedish Ballet.[10]
Notes
- ^ Hewett, Ivan. Music: Healing the Rift. Continuum International Publishing, 2005. 218. ISBN 0-8264-7609-0
- ^ a b c Grimshaw, Jeremy. "Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten, for string orchestra & bell". All Music. Retrieved on June 28, 2009.
- ^ a b Hillier, 103
- ^ a b Thomson, Clare. Footprint Tallinn. Footprint Handbooks, 2006. 179. ISBN 1-9047-7777-5
- ^ Pärt, A. Cantus in memory of Benjamin Britten für Streichorchester und eine Glocke. (musical score), Wien, Philharmonia, 1980. PH555.
- ^ Hillier, 87
- ^ a b Hillier, 96
- ^ Mihkelson, Immo. "All Human Achievement is like a Lego: Interview with Arvo Pärt". Postimees, June 12, 1998. Retrieved on June 28, 2009.
- ^ Kremer, Gidon. Sleeve notes to Pärt: Tabula Rasa. ECM New Series, 1988. ASIN: B0000262K7
- ^ Kisselgoff, Anna. "'For the Love of Dove,' and It Was". New York Times, June 19, 1996. Retrieved on June 28, 2009.
Sources and bibliography
- Hillier, Paul. Arvo Pärt. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-1981-6550-1
- Quinn, Peter. Arvo Pärt, Cantus in memory of Benjamin Britten. University of London, Goldsmiths' College, 1991
- Wallrabenstein, Wolfram. "Arvo Pärt: Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten". Zeitschrift für Musikpädagogik, October 31, 1985, 31. 13-31
External link
- Performance by A Far Cry, Jordan Hall, Boston, MA
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