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Ex Maria Virgine, was commissioned by Timothy Brown in 2005 and the Clare College Choir, Cambridge, who have recorded the selections for the present release. The 10-part piece focuses on the Blessed Virgin, honoring the "Eternal Feminine" as she is honored in Eastern Orthodoxy. Ex Maria Virgine is a difficult piece with flashes of great beauty. Tavener recasts "There is No Rose," "Ding dong Merrily on High" and "Rocking" in jarring fashion. This music is often dissonant and anxious, but relaxes in the final "Verbum Caro."
Tavener's shorter pieces are beautiful. "Birthday Sleep" based on a text by Vernon Watkins, is grand in an ancient style. Tavener soars here. The composer's setting for Yeat's "A Nativity" begins with a darkness that gives way to brightness as the piece unfolds. "O Thou Gentle Light" from the Orthodox liturgy, is the most consonant work and is stunning. Tavener remains, with Ex Maria Virgine the choral composer of note. It is encouraging to realize that music this fine continues to be composed.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sacred and sublime,
By Dean R. Brierly (Studio City, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: John Tavener: Ex Maria Virgine (Audio CD)
I'm hard pressed to think of another contemporary composer presently writing more challenging and beautiful choral music than John Tavener. Whether he's adapting existing ancient melodies or setting various poetic texts to music, the British-born musician has shown a special knack for imbuing his vocal pieces with a meditative and mystical ambience. His latest CD, "Ex Maria Virgine," is no exception. Described as a "Christmas sequence for choir and orchestra," it's a 10-part work, completed in 2005, that evokes Tavener's deep religious faith through a celebration of the Virgin Mary. And it does so in his usual idiosyncratic fashion. Tavener eschews the static nature of most choral music for a variegated and dynamic range of harmonic and rhythmic patterns of breathtaking intensity. The pieces range from stately (Verbum Caro) to discordant (Nowell! Nowell! Out of Your Sleep) to beatific (Rocking). Tavener creates some of the most gorgeous melodies imaginable, but with a lyrical astringency that darkens and complicates them in wonderful ways. His music thus bridges tradition and modernism, and imbues even the most sacred musical moments with a vibrant, almost brash immediacy. Rounding out this collection are six additional songs set to religious texts, all of them brought to life through the dazzling performance of the Choir of Clare College, Cambridge under the supple and knowing direction of Timothy Brown. This is holiday music of uncommon power and beauty that transcends its seasonal context to provide emotional and spiritual sustenance throughout the year.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Truly transcendent music,
By Aquinas "summa" (celestial heights, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: John Tavener: Ex Maria Virgine (Audio CD)
I got this when it first came out about a year ago and I did not warm to it and put it away, Returning to it, I am now entranced with it.
Ex Maria Virgine starts off with i) the creepy "Verbum Caro", moves through an eccentric variant of ii) "Nowell, Nowell"; then it moves to the iii) meditative "Remember O thou Man" interspersed with exclamatory music in contrast to the mediation, resting on iv)the lovely "Sweet was the song", moving up several gears to the v) aggressively sounding "Ave rex" punctuated with the organ; moving back to a more restful and ethereal state of vi) "There is no rose", moving to vii) the zany "ding dong", moving to the viii) beautiful lullaby "Rocking", and further lovely tune ix) "Unto us is born a Son" punctutated with ecstatic reaching for the skies and ending with x) the creepy "Verbum Caro". The rest of the album is also lovely but I would single out "Angels" with its tremolo organ playing.
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