
  
  Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
  L’amour et la foi 
  Trois petits liturgies de la Présence Divine (1943) [34.49]
  O Sacrum Convivium (1937) [4.35]
  Cinq Rechants for 12 solo voices (1948) [19.23]
  Marianna Shirinyan (piano)
  Thomas Bloch (ondes martenot)
  Danish National Vocal Ensemble
  Danish National Concert Choir and Chamber Orchestra/Marcus Creed
  rec. 2014, Danish Radio Studio 2; Garnisonskirken, Copenhagen.
  OUR RECORDINGS 6.220612 SACD [59.03]
  
   Listening to this extraordinary and oh-so-original music 
    I was reminded how Messiaen seems to exist outside the Western musical tradition. 
    He often proceeds by repetition with no conventional development. Form is 
    unfixed and orchestral, or perhaps one should say with these works, ensemble, 
    colours are uniquely his own. On this CD all this is made particularly clear 
    in the large-scale, three-movement Trois petits liturgies de la Presénce 
    divine. The CD's title, translated as ‘Love and Faith’, 
    applies very much to this work.
    
    The disc boasts: ‘This recording features Messiaen’s original 
    version for 16 solo strings and 18 sopranos”. As I was coming new to 
    this work I can’t speak of a personal understanding of any other version 
    but the scoring also uses piano, ondes martenot, celesta, vibraphone and percussion. 
    It was written in the darkest days of the Second World War but is so overpowering 
    joyous, especially in the second movement (‘Séquence du verbe, cantique 
    divin’), that you would never know it. When it does not bounce with 
    Messiaen’s typically inspired gamelan-type ostinati and rhythms, it 
    stands poised in a world somewhere between the stars and eternity. All the 
    time, especially in movement one (‘Antienne de la conversation intérieure’), 
    bird songs lash the vocal lines just like the mistle thrush I hear all day 
    in my garden, so varied so strong and positive. The third movement (‘Psalmodie 
    de l’ubiquité par Amour’), which is over seventeen minutes long, 
    sounds as if it once formed part of the famous ‘Turangalîla Symphonie’ 
    which had yet been composed when this work was being written. The ondes martenot 
    which Messiaen made all his own would probably sound quite ‘naff’ 
    in the hands of most composers. Here its ghostly presence acts as a spiritual 
    tool of uplifting bliss. It slinks between voices and strings like a musical 
    version of the Holy Spirit.
    
    The texts by the composer himself as was mostly the case, are non-biblical 
    but seem to be a modern extension of the Old Testament ‘Song of Songs’ 
    in its vague eroticisms. For example “By a kiss-throw your head overreaches 
    the picture /divine landscape”. The work hovers around A major although 
    often uses pentatonic harmonies. This key Messiaen associated with the colour 
    blue and with 'serene joy'. It is then exotic and exhilarating. 
    My only quibble with the performance/recording is that the words are not always 
    clearly heard and enunciated.
    
    There are umpteen recordings of the motet O Sacrum convivium. This 
    is perhaps the only text set by Messiaen which doubles up on settings from 
    the renaissance and more recent times. I have no intention of drawing your 
    attention to others but if you wanted to play to the ‘unconvinced’ 
    this is as good a version as you could find. It possesses beauty, poise and 
    an ideal vocal balance and blend. It passes the test every time.
    
    There have also been several recordings of the Cinq Rechants so I 
    will not list them. These are uniquely fascinating songs although refrains 
    (‘rechants’) seems a remarkably modest title for such highly complex 
    and virtuosic writing.
    
    The word Turangalîla is a Sanskrit word appertaining to certain rhythmic 
    formulas. The text of Cinq Rechants was compiled by Messiaen in Sanskrit 
    and French but it’s meaning is difficult to pin down. Christian Hildebrandt 
    in his helpful notes quotes the composer when he says "This is a love 
    song. This single fact is enough to guide the performers". There is a 
    strong connection with the Tristan and Isolde legend, which had haunted the 
    composer at this time as in his song cycle Harawi of 1945. There 
    are twelve solo voices and they must make a wide variety of percussive noises 
    as well as using a broad palette of other vocal techniques. Again there is 
    a strong sense of disguised eroticism “my bouquet all undone is shining 
    pink shutters”.
    
    The CD comes with full and clear texts and the essay in French and English 
    with lavish colour photographs. The booklet is tucked inside the neat cardboard 
    casing as is becoming the norm. As for the performances, you are left in no 
    doubt that Marcus Creed extracts from the singers especially, every necessary 
    nuance that each moment of the Cinq Rechant requires. Despite that, 
    whether it’s as great a work as many suppose is to my mind still open 
    to question.
    
    Gary Higginson