'A Hymn to the Mother of God'

 

As we prepare for the beginning of choir season, I wanted to share a special choral setting I’ve known since early college days. The text is the “Hymn to the Mother of God” which appears in the Liturgy of St. Basil the Great, a lengthy and beautiful service that is sung only ten times a year in the Orthodox cycle.

”In you, O Woman full of Grace, the angelic choirs, and the human race, all creation rejoices…”

The late British composer, Sir John Tavener (1944-2013) wrote this setting for double choir, and he achieved a particularly static, all-encompassing effect by writing the same music for each choir, and instructing each group to begin singing at different moments.This canon-like device, together with slow moving, parallel harmonies, creates an expansive, suspended wash of sound that envelopes the listener. Clearly, Tavener’s music depicts the Theotokos (Mother of God) in warmly cosmic terms. We can “hear” the hymn's word-picture, that Mary’s womb became “wider than the heavens” in order to carry the incarnate Son of God.

Below are three videos for your enjoyment:

Justin Appel

Music Director

 
 
"Hymn to the Mother of God" (John Tavener) performed by Tenebrae Choir and artistic director Nigel Short in Sainte Chapelle as part of the Paris Mezzo Festiv...
 

 
Hymn to the Mother of God Music by John Tavener Performed by The Gesualdo Six and the Sixth Form Choristers of Truro Cathedral Choir Images by Ash Mills - - ...
 

 
Filmed live on Candlemas, Tuesday 2 February 2016 Ely Cathedral is one of those places where music lifts the soul towards heaven in surroundings that are sub...