Arvo Pärt - Magister Ludi - P. Hillier (1989)
Arvo Pärt - Magister Ludi - P. Hillier (1989)
Arvo Pärt - Magister Ludi - P. Hillier (1989)
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Arvo
Part
Magister
Ludi
Paul Hillier
lb
A r
vL n
(CL.)
Ex. 2a
A
i' |b
Glo-ri-a
I ll
ll
- *I
||
Already in the Gloria's three-part texture this technique is yielding unpremeditated harmonies whose effect
is not dissonant but which form clusters of tones and
semitones that cause the tonal centre to vibrate with an
unsuspected immanence. This process is further enriched in the Credo where the texture becomes four-part. In
this section high and low pairsof voices alternate,creating
a sense of antiphony. In each pairthe upper voice ascends
from A while the lower voice descends onto D. Each voice
is accompanied by a tintinnabuli part.
The Sanctusdemonstrateswell how a shift of tonal centre can respond to the text. The music is now based on
F and the mood of exultation is further enhanced by the
use of full choir and instruments, effectively in eight parts
(though in fact four doubled at the octave). The Agnus
returns to the mood of the Kyrie (time is nearly vertical)
though the texture is three-part. The final salutation 'Ite
Missa Est' restores all melodic voices to a D tonal centre
and has the same texture as the Sanctus.
The text determinesnot only the melodicsubstance(and
thereby the harmonic as well), but also the rhythms of
the work in all its respects. The exact formulation of this
variesfromwork to work, but the setting is alwayssyllabic
and uses equal note-lengthsexcept for the ends of phrases.
These cadentialpoints arealwaysestablishedby the punctuation, and different lengthenings may apply to commas
and to full-stops. Sometimes it is the initial syllable of the
final word that is lengthened, sometimes the whole word;
sometimes the initial word or syllable is also lengthened.
Whatever the particular scheme, it is adhered to
completely.
This approachis obliquely reminiscent of John Cage's
removal of personal choice (and therefore taste) from the
job of composition, so that the composer's task is 'to ask
the right questions'. Part does apply personal taste of
course and the end results are very different, but the
obliteration of the ego is a philosophical or spiritual goal
shared by both composers.
While it may be a little austerefor concert performance,
the Missa sillabicais a perfect setting for church use (if the
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136
melodic voice begins on the tonal centre for the first two
lines (alternatelyrising and falling), but starts above and
below that note for the third line (see ex.4). All four
melodic modes can now be present in each melodic voice.
An interesting innovation in the technique occurs when
a single voice sings a tintinnabuli part, following the
'rules', but no melodic part is actually sounding.
Ex. 4
Tenor
'., I Jli.."f
J
Jiol JI .J..
Jir"..1
Sta- bat ma- ter do- lo- roe a jux- ta cru- cem lac- ri- mo- ?a dum pen- de- bat fi- li- us