Maybe it was the freedom. I managed a vitamin store at the Northland Mall (out of business now), and commuted to Melvin, where reasonable rents helped stretch low wages.
There is no comparison to Paris, of course, but like Mozart, I was forced to work where I really didn’t really want to. The Iowa Great Lakes were close (a summer recreation area), but not so much great classical music. The only compact disc (CD) I had at the time was “Krönungsmesse."
Timed perfectly from the Northland Mall to the plateau on the Minnesota-Iowa border, the “Agnus Dei,” or "Lamb of God" chorus in Mozart’s “Mass No. 15,” (or “Krönungsmesse"), capped the homestretch. Yes, church music, even Mozart’s, is rather solemn, but it accompanied me, by default, every late-night. And I soon found the music, and especially the Agnus Dei, exhilarating.
Mozart’s “Mass No. 15 in C major is a short mass (as opposed to a more formal or High Mass). Mozart wrote about this in a letter:
Thus the setting had be grand and ceremonial, but the mass also needed to have a compact structure, the Aylesbury Choral Society said. Mozart therefore omits formal closing fugues for the Gloria and Credo, the Credo with its problematic, vast text is in a tight rondo form, and the Dona nobis pacem (grant us peace) recalls the music of the Kyrie (Lord, have mercy) heard at the beginning.
Interestingly, as early as the 19th Century the mass was already
popularly referred to as the "Coronation Mass," or “Krönungsmesse." The nickname grew out of the misguided belief that Mozart had written the mass for Salzburg's annual celebration of the anniversary of the crowning of the Shrine of the Virgin. The more likely explanation is that it was one of the works that was performed during the coronation festivities in Prague, either as early as August 1791 for Leopold II, or certainly for Leopold's successor Francis I in August 1792.
All of this on a CD in a Saturn Ion — and years of
listening (and research for this article). In the old days such information would be
difficult, if not impossible to find. But today Youtube
offers countless opportunities to find Mozart’s "Mass No. 15 in C major, K.317." The translation of the Latin can be
found easily too, and can be viewed here. It can also be printed to follow the Mass in
English. But it doesn’t need a
translation, not really.
The links supplied here also include several
YouTube recordings. There is a
traditional recording too (minus the girls in the orchestra). But the one shared below is the
best. The
soloists in the Dona nobis pacem are weak for some reason, but there is an ad lib in the Agnus Dei solo, or a hint of one anyway.
Full moons, dark country roads, ice-age glaciers and 12-hour
days at work. Sit back, listen and
enjoy. Mozart’s return from Paris. Remarkable.
No comments:
Post a Comment