Inviolata (after Lusitano)
Internal Reference:
511369
Besetzung:
SSAATTBB
Komponist:
WILLIAMS Roderick
Verlag:
Peters
Verlagsnummer:
EP73786
ISMN:
9790577025322
Ausgabe:
Partitur
DOB_Sparte:
diverse geistlich
Epoche:
Neu
Rory invited me to compose my own response to Lusitano’s Inviolata setting. I would be adding a third layer on top of Josquin’s original, as seen through Lusitano’s eyes and then my own. While I did consider constructing my own eight-part polyphonic texture in kind, I acknowledge that I am no Josquin! Besides which, the harmonic rules that governed Josquin and Lusitano barely apply in my century which makes the exercise largely redundant. This is something I explore a little by adding my own musica ficta (modern-day accidentals) to Part One of Lusitano’s original, before my 21st century harmony takes the music in a different direction. Instead, thanks to a suggestion from my older brother (who happens to be an expert practitioner of Medieval and early Renaissance polyphony), I thought to go back a stage further even than Josquin’s setting and consider the plainsong itself. This was the original melody and text that inspired the whole chain of compositions and I wondered whether it could be my basis for an exploration of plainsong, homophony, organum and polyphony, a sort of mini-history lesson in music.
Added to this commission was the circumstances of its premiere as a recording. It was devised for a project in which each individual consort voice was recorded separately in order to be played from an individual speaker. The resulting sound installation was arranged in an otherwise empty room, giving an audient member complete freedom to roam and experience the voices individually at point-blank range or together as part of the full consort. This gave me an opportunity to play with sound and space, having singers at times whisper text into one’s ear, as though hearing scraps in the darkness of an abbey cloister. Mixing English with Latin also allowed me to explore the passionate emotion of this Marian text and the extraordinary position Mary holds within the Catholic faith. What Josquin or Lusitano might make of it we shall never know but the homage to their versions is present within my own.
Roderick Williams