Past Event: Yale Camerata | Music for Palm Sunday

Arvo Pärt, composer

This event has passed.

Location: St. Thomas Episcopal Church
830 Whitney Avenue
New Haven, CT

Admission: Free

Open To: General Public

Description: Passio - Arvo Pärt. Music for Palm Sunday, Marguerite L. Brooks, conductor with:

  • Lisa Rautenberg, violin
  • Olav Van Hezewijk, oboe
  • Wayne Hileman, bassoon
  • Mihai Marcia, cello
  • Ian Tomesch, organ
  • Miles Canaday, Jesus
  • Noah Horn, Pilate

Composer Bio: When comparing all of Pärt’s post-1976 works, there is one underlying theme: the numinous. Arvo Pärt’s approach to religion has given rise to a humbleness in his artistic aims – his is an attempt to fathom what is secret and unknowable, and he is aware that this will be revealed to him in untranslatable musical forms, if at all – in works which silence chooses to abandon of its own accord. 9 His music is often said to transport the listener to a “moment outside time” 10, emerging from silence at the beginning of the work and slowly returning to it as the piece closes. Whatever the intention of the piece, many of his works can be said to reflect the inconceivable sadness that Mary and the disciples felt as Christ was crucified before them on the cross. Sandner states, “In a world in which Christian ideals are not universally acknowledged, this state of suffering (of the Passion of Christ without which all that comes after Christ cannot occur) is not one that must be artificially created.” 11 The melodic figures, restricted to only a few notes, are powerful in that they are filled with both grace and sadness. Sandner notes that, “Arvo Pärt’s cryptic remarks on his compositions orbit around the words ‘silent’ and ‘beautiful’ – minimal, by now almost imperiled associative notions, but ones which reverberate his musical creations.” 12 Unresolved dissonance is exploited, most notably at phrase beginnings and endings and on decidedly important syllables of text. However, each dissonance means in ways that cannot be easily described. That is to say that the dissonances are used, not as flamboyant exhibitionist gestures (as in his earlier serial works), but as unassuming vehicles for conveying an enigmatic sorrow.