Religious choral music
Kazim here. I know I've mentioned before that I sing in the Austin
Community Chorus, and that we do a lot of religious music. I did a
whole show about justified acknowledgment of religion in art and
education a while back. The fact is that historically, MOST classical
music (along with other forms of art) was sponsored by the church. So
in general, if a song is much more than a hundred years old and has
words, there's a fairly high chance that it will have something to do
with Jesus.
This doesn't stop the music from being very uplifting and well
written. A couple of years ago I was doing Bach's "Saint Matthew
Passion," which ranks high among the best music I've ever heard from
any era. Of course, the words are in Latin, so it's easy to just
ignore what you're saying unless you grew up Catholic, which I didn't.
This season we're doing a piece called Saint Paul by Felix
Mendelssohn. I'm not familiar with very much Mendelssohn. I've heard
the overture he wrote for A Midsummer Night's Dream and it's fine.
Apparently, this upcoming performance is a fairly big deal.
Mendelssohn originally wrote the piece in English but then later
translated it back into his native German, and the German version
became the standard while the English got lost to history.
Apparently some music historian dug up the original English lyrics and
republished it. There have been other translations before, but our
concert will feature the world debut of THESE PARTICULAR English
lyrics, or something like that. Musicians get excited about the
weirdest things.
Anyway, my point in writing this is that I don't particularly like it.
The music doesn't really do it for me, but singing the English words
just makes it generally much more unpleasant. The story is the most
tedious kind of apologetics. It is all about how Saint Paul used to
persecute Christians, then was blinded and visited by Jesus. He
converted to Christianity and then went on to write most of the most
awful sexually repressed parts of the Bible. (Okay, that last part
isn't in the piece, it's just my spin.)
Probably my least favorite passage is when he's condemning a Christian
to death. The basses chant "Stone him to death!" and then the tenors
(that's me) join in "Stone him to death!" and then the altos and then
the sopranos, and so everybody is yelling in unison. Frankly, it's a
little bit creepy and uncomfortable. Supposedly it's about the Jewish
power structure persecuting the Christians, but I can't help flashing
forward on the Spanish Inquisition and other acts of atrocity, as well
as the modern reconstructionist movement, who ironically want to bring
back exactly the punishment that is used to portray Paul as a bad guy.
It kind of feels like being part of a lynch mob.
Much of the rest of the piece follows the kind of simpering glurginess
that you often hear in praise of Christianity. It's a lot of "Oh
blessed are they who have endured" and even something that goes like
(paraphrasing because I don't have the score) "You are so grand and
mysterious that you are beyond our comprehension." Bleah.
Next season, though, we get Beethoven's Ninth (Ode to Joy). Now that's
something worth sticking around for.
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