Messiaen on Liturgical Music
  • Guadalupe
    Posts: 50
    In preparation for writing program notes for my senior organ recital, I decided to read “Contributions to the Spiritual World of Olivier Messiaen” by Almut Rößler, and am hoping that forum readers will enjoy this excerpt from the book.

    Conférence de Notre Dame, delivered on December 4, 1977

    Liturgical Music

    There is only one: plainsong. Only plainsong possesses all at once the purity, the joy, the lightness necessary for the soul’s flight toward Truth. Unfortunately – with the exception of some monks in the monasteries, some great theoreticians like Dom Mocquereau, and some professional musicians who still know how to read it—plainsong is not well known. It is not well known mainly because it is not sung well. And the first mistake committed by our immediate ancestors was its harmonization. Plainsong was written in an epoch where the obstruction of conventional chords, of complexes of sounds, and even of simple instrumental support were unknown. It must then be sung without any accompaniment. It must also be sung by all voices: men’s, women’s, children’s. Finally, it must be sung with an appreciation and respect of the neumes. Music history texts speak much of the modes of plainsong: the Dorian mode, Phrygian mode, Lydian, Mixolydian—and it is certain that each of these modes has a particular poetry and color. But this is only a matter of form. The marvelous thing about plainsong is its neumes.

    The neumes are melodic formulae, analogous to the auxiliaries, appoggiaturas, passing-tones described in harmony treatises—but are much more complex.

    They are also found in the songs of birds: the Garden Warbler, the Black-Cap, the Song-Thrush, the Field Lark, the Robin, all sing neumes. And the admirable quality of the neume is the rhythmic suppleness which it engenders. This rhythmic suppleness which comes to us from the Anaklasis of Ionic verse (Greek meter), from the Candrakalâ and its addition of dots (deci-tâlas of ancient India), and that Chopin had tried to rediscover in his rubato, is here expressed in several fashions: by the mingling of binary and ternary, by groups of unequal duration, by the strong and doubled values of the Pressus, by the soft and doubled values of the Oriscus, by the joyous carillon of the Distropha and Tristropha, by the extraordinary slowing which precedes the Quilisma. All of this brings about extremely delicate variations of rhythm and tempo. The invisible advances with light steps, which do not touch the grass, and do not bend the flowers, like those of the resurrected by Fra Angelico….

    Let us add that this delicacy of plainsong may only be manifest in quickness and joy. If plainsong is sung with appropriate liveliness and rapidity, it will be so loved that it will no longer by passed by.

    A final difficulty is that of Latin. Plainsong is built upon magnificent Latin texts: it is impossible to separate them! I do not think that this should worry those who maintain the language of their native county. One may very well recite the “Eucharistic Prayer” in French (or any other vernacular language) without depriving oneself of some magnificent pieces of plainsong which last no longer than a minute or two, or even half a minute. When will we once again have the joy of hearing the Tristopha of the marvelous Offertory of Epiphany, “Reges Tharsis”, the Salicus and Torculus of the Alleluia for Easter, “Pascha Nostrum”, and the extraordinary sequence for the Frestival of the Holy Sacrament, “Lauda Sion”?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,451
    Love it.
  • I am a big Messiaen fan, and, in the mean, couldn't agree more with his comments on chant in this excerpt.

    I am always heartened when great organists recognize that chant is best sung as pure melody. And M's observation on tempo is spot-on. It is clear from his comments that he was capable of thinking about sacred music beyond the accretions he had inherited, as well as the trends of his time. This quality of fresh analysis is perhaps what I admire most about him. It certainly made it possible for him to come up with his own harmonic language, which I find quite ordered and beautiful.
  • DougS
    Posts: 793
    I would add that Messiaen's views on sacred music were shaped primarily in the 1920s and 1930s, when Parisian Catholics were in the midst of a widespread revival of "authentic" Catholic culture, including Gregorian chant.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,183
    Stephen Schloesser's book "jazz Age Catholicism" is an examination into this Catholic revival going on in Paris in the 1920's and 30's and a great read. This book looks at this revival through a number of notable examples of people working in Paris at that time. However, the musical example he chooses to use is Charles Tournemire, who is close to my heart.

    I understand he is working on material about Messiaen and may even be preparing a book on him.
  • DougS
    Posts: 793
    Messiaen the Theologian (which has an essay by Schloesser) is also a good read and delves into these issues from a variety of perspectives. But I'm biased.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,183
    Gee Doug. Nice article. Definitely a good read. Now to get the book.
  • DougS
    Posts: 793
    Thanks! If you do pursue it, I would go through ILL. The price tag is ridiculously exorbitant.
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,183
    Some things are worth it. I take St. Domenic's notion, "poverty in all all things except books."