Stations : Symphony no. 4 / Anthony Richie.



Sound Recording

Information About

Texts from poems by Bernadette Hall. Compact disc. "Based on a live performance at Wigram Airforce Museum, Christchurch, February 2014"--Container. Jenny Wollerman, soprano; Christchurch Symphony Orchestra; Tom Woods, conductor. Vocal texts sung in English.

Title
Stations : Symphony no. 4 / Anthony Richie.
Artist
Ritchie, Anthony. I am very small.
Subjects
Language
zxx
Type
Sound Recording
Abstract
This symphony was composed for The Christchurch Symphony Orchestra with financial assistance from The University of Otago. It is in one movement, divided into 14 sections, or 'stations', and is to be performed without a break. It is dedicated to those in Christchurch who have suffered in the earthquakes. This symphony takes as its point of departure a book called The Way of the Cross, which combines images of sculptures by Llew Summers with poems by Bernadette Hall, both of which centre on the Christchurch Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, in New Zealand. Llew Summers' sequence of 14 sculptures entitled The Stations of the Cross were created for the Cathedral in Christchurch in 2000, and outline the final events in the life of Jesus Christ. They caused controversy at the time, with their challenging re-interpretation of the traditional Christian images. Bernadette Hall's 14 poems followed some years later, and were informed by the sculptures. The poems and images of the sculptures were both published in the book The Way of the Cross in 2005. In 2011, the Catholic Cathedral was ruined in the second of the major earthquakes that shook Christchurch, and currently faces possible demolition. As a response to these events, this symphony includes several musical settings of Hall's poems. Not all the poems are set, however: some 'stations' are purely instrumental, forming musical meditations on the texts as well as suggesting other images and moods related to the earthquakes. The trials and suffering of Jesus Christ as depicted in the poems/sculptures become associated with the trials and suffering of a city. There are also personal associations in the music, deriving from the composer's own experiences in the Cathedral, both as a composer and as a member of the Cathedral choir in the late 1970s. Consequently, two quotations feature prominently: first from Palestrina's Missa Papae Marcelli (in Station 5) and second, from Bach's St John Passion (in Station 12). Therefore, elements of mythology and life experiences are brought together in this work. There is considerable cross-referencing of musical ideas between 'stations', and some re-cycling of material towards the end, as a sort of summary of themes. For example, the main themes from Station No. 4 return and are extended in station No. 13, and the quotation from Palestrina (transformed) also reappears at the climax of the work, at the start of Station No. 14.
Year
2014
Original Publisher(s)
Digital Publisher(s)