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Leonard Bernstein|Mass

Mass

Leonard Bernstein

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Leonard Bernstein's Mass: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers is the composer/conductor's most ambitious and most controversial work. Commissioned to create a stage production to inaugurate the opera house at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., on September 8, 1971, Bernstein, who had recently left his post as the music director of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra to spend more time composing, turned to the Roman Catholic mass as a structure to investigate issues of faith and doubt, and of the political and social upheavals of the era of the late '60s and early '70s. An outspoken eclectic who had already composed for the concert hall and the Broadway stage, he had also expressed admiration for contemporary pop and rock music, and he incorporated all these elements into this music, along with other styles. And, as he had with his successful Broadway musical West Side Story, he collaborated with a young songwriter on the lyrics, in this case 23-year-old Stephen Schwartz, who had written both music and lyrics for the similarly themed Off-Broadway musical Godspell. The large-scale work, incorporating a pit orchestra, an on-stage band, an adult choir, a boys choir, and a dance company in addition to the actual cast of singers and actors, actually had a simple premise. Although the American Catholic Church had recently abandoned celebrating the mass in Latin, Bernstein adopted the Latin text, with its cries of "Kyrie eleison!" ("Lord, have mercy!") and "Agnus Dei" ("Lamb of God"), and he followed the usual course of a mass, with its prayers and sermon, leading up to communion. Instead of a priest, there was a "Celebrant," who appeared on-stage initially in jeans with an acoustic guitar, singing "A Simple Song," but then was invested with a priest's garments. The formal parts of the mass were sometimes set to lively music, notably the "Prefatory Prayers," played by a marching band out of John Philip Sousa. As the mass went on, its proceedings were infiltrated and interrupted by a series of "street" performers who sang in light rock and blues styles, using slangy language and expressing irreverent, skeptical, and, eventually, outright hostile attitudes toward the Celebrant and God. Near the end, the Celebrant himself suffered a sort of musical nervous breakdown before the congregation finally came together in a call for peace and understanding. As such, Mass was very much in the style of such recent predecessors as Hair, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Godspell in its attempts to reflect and reconcile the religious, cultural, and political rifts of its time. Predictably, it earned Bernstein criticism from those on either side of those rifts, largely ignored by the pop/rock audience that had sent Jesus Christ Superstar to the top of the charts earlier in the year (although it did reach number 53 in the Billboard pop LP chart), while offending some classical and religious figures. On purely musical terms, however, it contains some of Bernstein's most exciting non-classical music, its songs tuneful, but with surprising turns and echoes of Candide and West Side Story. Schwartz and Bernstein's lyrics (with a small assist from Paul Simon) are less impressive, but they manage to articulate the doubts and temptations that people of faith were encountering in modern society, circa 1971. In fact, the main flaw of the work as a dramatic effort may be that the problems were better articulated than the resolution, which seemed facile and tacked on. Conducted by the composer, this recording, featuring the original Kennedy Center cast, is an excellent representation of a unique composition that, because of its scale, is rarely performed. Alan Titus, in the role of the Celebrant, is particularly impressive.

© William Ruhlmann /TiVo

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Mass

Leonard Bernstein

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Mass - A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers I (Leonard Bernstein)

1
I. Devotions before Mass: 1. Antiphon: Kyrie eleison (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:56

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

2
I. Devotions before Mass: 2. Hymn and Psalm: "A Simple Song" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:04:42

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

3
I. Devotions before Mass: 3. Responsory - Alleluia (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:08

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

4
II. First Introit (Rondo): 1. Prefatory Prayers (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:14

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

5
II. First Introit (Rondo): 2. Thrice-Triple Canon - Dominus vobiscum (2017 Remastered Version)
00:00:35

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

6
III. Second Introit: 1. In nomine Patris (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:00

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

7
III. Second Introit: 2. Prayer for the congregation (Chorale: "Almighty Father") (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:30

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

8
III. Second Introit: 3. Epiphany (2017 Remastered Version)
00:00:58

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

9
IV. Confession: 1. Confiteor (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:18

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

10
IV. Confession: 2. Trope: "I Don't Know" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:42

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

11
IV. Confession: 3. Trope: "Easy" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:14

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

12
V. Meditation No. 1 (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:09

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

13
VI. Gloria: 1. Gloria tibi (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:48

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

14
VI. Gloria: 2. Gloria in excelsis (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:13

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

15
VI. Gloria: 3. Trope: "Half of the People" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:00:58

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

16
VI. Gloria: 4. Trope: "Thank You" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:45

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

17
VII. Meditation No. 2 (2017 Remastered Version)
00:03:56

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

18
VIII. Epistle: "The Word of the Lord" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:57

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

19
IX. Gospel-Sermon: "God Said" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:02

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

DISC 2

1
X. Credo: 1. Credo in unum Deum (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:06

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

2
X. Credo: 2. Trope: "Non Credo" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:14

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

3
X. Credo: 3. Trope: "Hurry" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:20

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

4
X. Credo: 4. Trope: "World Without End" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:43

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

5
X. Credo: 5. Trope: "I Believe in God" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:09

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

6
XI. Meditation No. 3 (De profundis, part 1) (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:49

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

7
XII. Offertory (De profundis, part 2) (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:01

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

8
XIII. The Lord's Prayer: 1. Our Father... (2017 Remastered Version)
00:01:46

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

9
XIII. The Lord's Prayer: 2. Trope: "I Go On" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:02:34

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

10
XIV. Sanctus (2017 Remastered Version)
00:05:14

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

11
XV. Agnus Dei (2017 Remastered Version)
00:07:06

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

12
XVI. Fraction: "Things Get Broken" (2017 Remastered Version)
00:14:23

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

13
XVII. Pax: Communion ("Secret Songs") (2016 Remastered Version)
00:09:52

Leonard Bernstein, Composer, Conductor, MainArtist - Norman Scribner Choir, Choir - Stephen Schwartz, Lyricist - Alan Titus, Baritone - The Berkshire Boy Choir, Choir - Mass Cast Studio Orchestra, Orchestra

(P) 1971 Sony Music Entertainment

Albumbeschreibung

Leonard Bernstein's Mass: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers is the composer/conductor's most ambitious and most controversial work. Commissioned to create a stage production to inaugurate the opera house at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., on September 8, 1971, Bernstein, who had recently left his post as the music director of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra to spend more time composing, turned to the Roman Catholic mass as a structure to investigate issues of faith and doubt, and of the political and social upheavals of the era of the late '60s and early '70s. An outspoken eclectic who had already composed for the concert hall and the Broadway stage, he had also expressed admiration for contemporary pop and rock music, and he incorporated all these elements into this music, along with other styles. And, as he had with his successful Broadway musical West Side Story, he collaborated with a young songwriter on the lyrics, in this case 23-year-old Stephen Schwartz, who had written both music and lyrics for the similarly themed Off-Broadway musical Godspell. The large-scale work, incorporating a pit orchestra, an on-stage band, an adult choir, a boys choir, and a dance company in addition to the actual cast of singers and actors, actually had a simple premise. Although the American Catholic Church had recently abandoned celebrating the mass in Latin, Bernstein adopted the Latin text, with its cries of "Kyrie eleison!" ("Lord, have mercy!") and "Agnus Dei" ("Lamb of God"), and he followed the usual course of a mass, with its prayers and sermon, leading up to communion. Instead of a priest, there was a "Celebrant," who appeared on-stage initially in jeans with an acoustic guitar, singing "A Simple Song," but then was invested with a priest's garments. The formal parts of the mass were sometimes set to lively music, notably the "Prefatory Prayers," played by a marching band out of John Philip Sousa. As the mass went on, its proceedings were infiltrated and interrupted by a series of "street" performers who sang in light rock and blues styles, using slangy language and expressing irreverent, skeptical, and, eventually, outright hostile attitudes toward the Celebrant and God. Near the end, the Celebrant himself suffered a sort of musical nervous breakdown before the congregation finally came together in a call for peace and understanding. As such, Mass was very much in the style of such recent predecessors as Hair, Jesus Christ Superstar, and Godspell in its attempts to reflect and reconcile the religious, cultural, and political rifts of its time. Predictably, it earned Bernstein criticism from those on either side of those rifts, largely ignored by the pop/rock audience that had sent Jesus Christ Superstar to the top of the charts earlier in the year (although it did reach number 53 in the Billboard pop LP chart), while offending some classical and religious figures. On purely musical terms, however, it contains some of Bernstein's most exciting non-classical music, its songs tuneful, but with surprising turns and echoes of Candide and West Side Story. Schwartz and Bernstein's lyrics (with a small assist from Paul Simon) are less impressive, but they manage to articulate the doubts and temptations that people of faith were encountering in modern society, circa 1971. In fact, the main flaw of the work as a dramatic effort may be that the problems were better articulated than the resolution, which seemed facile and tacked on. Conducted by the composer, this recording, featuring the original Kennedy Center cast, is an excellent representation of a unique composition that, because of its scale, is rarely performed. Alan Titus, in the role of the Celebrant, is particularly impressive.

© William Ruhlmann /TiVo

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