Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir / Kaspars Putniņš SCHNITTKE Psalms of Repentance PÄRT Magnificat & Nunc Dimittis
Alfred Schnittke and Arvo Pärt lived through times of remarkable change
in the last decades of the Soviet Union. From the 1970s, state
restrictions on religion were gradually relaxed and this was reflected
in the arts and especially in music. Schnittke’s adoption of
Christianity was triggered by the death of his mother in 1972, and
culminated in his later
conversion to Catholicism. Pärt was from a nominally Lutheran background
in Estonia, but embraced the Orthodox faith in the 1970s, following
intensive study of liturgical music. Both composers began to incorporate
religious themes into their work, moving away from the modernist
abstraction that had characterized their early careers.
Schnittke’s large-scale Psalms of Repentance were composed in 1988 for
the celebrations for the millennium of Christianity in Russia. The texts
come from an anonymous collection of poems for Lent, written in the
16th century, and in his settings Schnittke engages with the traditions
of chant-based Orthodox liturgical music. The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir and Kaspars Putniņš have chosen to combine Schnittke’s
Psalms with two shorter works by Arvo Pärt, whose music they are
well-known exponents of. Like the Psalms, Pärt’s pieces are composed in a
quasi-liturgical style, and with its serene atmosphere, his Nunc
dimittis forms a natural counterpart to the Magnificat even though the
two were written more than a decade apart.
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