Number 13 Part I Music 6 Requiem by Karl Jenkins A
Number 13 Part I Music 6 Requiem by Karl Jenkins A
Number 13 Part I Music 6 Requiem by Karl Jenkins A
13 2017 43-59
Abstract: In the diverse space of contemporary music, the fascinating and controversial
personality of the Welsh composer Karl Jenkins, which is surprising from several
perspectives, stands out. Open to assimilating and processing music from various sources
(academic, liturgical, folk, entertainment, oriental, exotic), the all-round musician Karl
Jenkins impresses the public with unexpected artistic choices, giving up the hypostasis of
instrumentalist of the jazz-rock band Nucleus and of the group Softmachine in favour of the
postmodern creator he has become today, synthetizing trends from musical compositions of
the last decades of the 20th century. Once with the return to the functional system, either
through minimalism or through neo-romanticism, the artist has successfully covered a
potential sonority path of modern opposites, also evoking references to creative models of the
past. We are referring to the musical valorizing of the sacred in a synthetic vision between
tradition and innovation, in the works included in the Adiemus cycle, in the opus choir Missa
for Peace and, more particularly, in the Requiem (2005), a significant score in the
contemporaneity. The manner in which the composer, while resorting to a musical genre
originating from the Roman Catholic cult and drawing on the liturgical text of the Mass for
the dead, inserted Japanese poetry, written following the structure of haiku, belonging to
representative authors - Gozan Koshigaya, Issho Kosughi, Hokusai Katsushika, Kaga-no-
Chiyo, is highly surprising. This study aims to highlight the interweaving imagined by Karl
Jenkins between the two cultures as well as to conduct a semantic analysis of an opus in
which the relationships between music and words entail a highly emotional response.
Key words: requiem, liturgical song, haiku, Western European music tradition, call for
entertainment genres, Japanese lyric, traditional Japanese instruments
1. Introduction
The discussion on the universalist musician Karl Jenkins, a clear
supporter of the famous contemporary direction World Music, first of all entails
some clarifications regarding the classification of a personality of many talents
in the generous and meandered Postmodern space, in order to be able to offer
some answers to the meanings of the sacred universe from the perspective of the
contemporary artist. What is clear, though, is that, among the many facets of
musical Postmodernism, Karl Jenkins opts “against intellectual complexity in
sound art” (Nyman, 1993, p. 207; Amblard, 2013, p. 1389), a line drawn since
the late 80s, creatively valued and theorized by the contemporary composer
Michael Nyman. In the latter‟s opinion, and not only, the refusal of Modernism
draws possible connections between classical, traditional and entertainment
15
Associate Professor PhD., “George Enescu” National University of Arts from Iaşi, Romania, email:
iatesenloredana@yahoo.com
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music from the European and extra-European area - in other words, it resorts to
the controversial and yet highly acclaimed world music16 style.
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(taking over creative landmarks from the 19th century). The return to tradition
can occur, on the one hand, radically (as in the case of neo-romanticism or of
Arvo Päert‟s sonority of an extreme simplicity), and on the other hand, by
tracing a route that includes New Simplicity minimalism and synthesis
intonations from musical antecedence, into a possible harmonization with
modernity (Sandu-Dediu, 2010, pp. 443-444). The American postminimalist
composers (Meredidh Monk, Michael Torke, John Adams), those inspired from
the pop, rock, jazz universe, taking over certain instruments or genres (Amblard,
2013), are in pursuit of this direction. Moreover, they themselves are
practitioners of pop music, collaborating with vocal or instrumental artists, a
particularity to which Karl Jenkins, a universalist musician, also adheres. Even
adding a personal touch to language parameters (obsessive rhythmic structures,
return to tonality, the use of natural resonance effects, of monody, of major-
minor chord structures) targets, in the case of Jenkins and of other musicians of
the time, the contemporary artist‟s openness to academic, traditional,
entertainment sonorities, from the European and extra-European area.
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similarities to Mozart's Requiem, a different score from its initial form imposed
by the Council of Trent, due to its missa structure which comprises 12 parts
(Dies irae, Tuba mirum, Rex tremendae, Recordare, Confutatis, Lacrimosa,
Domine Jesu, Hostias, Andante, Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei), based on six
stanzas of a Latin poetic text from the 13th century and on six liturgical texts
from the funeral mass. Regarding the music, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart‟s
Requiem was a model for Karl Jenkins‟s work from the same genre, the
Postmodern creator offering a sequence of simplified versions, in terms of sound
and writing, or free improvisations, in the development of its 13 moments,
Mozart‟s masterpiece being regarded as the obvious source of inspiration.
7.1.1. Introit
In the introduction, the composer synthesizes the original liturgical text
from the sections Introitus, Kirie and Graduale, preserving the traditional
structure imposed by the Council of Trent, which is a common feature of most
religious sections: Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine et lux perpetua luceat eis
(Eternal rest give to them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them);
Kirie eleison (Lord have mercy on us); Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine et
lux perpetua luceat eis (Eternal rest give to them, O Lord, and let perpetual light
shine upon them). The Introitus commences with a diatonic α motif exposed by
two horns in A minor tonality, which subordinates a simple aerated harmonic
accompaniment, rendered by the chordophone instruments, in blurred dynamics,
mp. (m. 1-4). From landmark A, the original motif is developed through melodic
sequencing, chromaticism insertion, to m: II↓ (B flat), using the harmonic
variant (G ♯), augmented 4th scale, to m: IV↑, minor-major (C sharp / C natural)
relationship, with tempo: V (m. 5-18). The corresponding lyrics are: Requiem
aeternam dona eis Domine et lux perpetua luceat eis (Eternal rest give to them,
O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them). The homonymous (A minor/A
major) modulation marks the chance in the lyrics: Te decet hymnus, Deus in
Sion, et tibi reddetur votum in Jerusalem (A hymn, O God, becometh Thee in
Zion and a vow shall be paid to Thee in Jerusalem).
Figure 1 (Introit, m. 1-13)
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While section A (m. 1-18) can be interpreted as an antecedent moment,
based on the melody (arching intervals, sequencing method), leading to an
expanded motif (the theme of a fugue), section B (m. 19-26) has a consistent
role.
Figure 2 (Introit, m. 14-26)
The 4th altered diminished scale makes the transition to D flat major in
section C (m. 27-38), the beginning of the next stanza being in A minor. The
lyrics Exhaudi orationem meam, ad te omnis caro veniet (O Lord, hear my
prayer, all flesh shall come to Thee) stress all the emotions that are emanating
from this reference score. The following seven measures (m.39-45) belonging to
section D entail a return to the initial theme in the two horns in F. Once we reach
part E, we are confronted with the middle part of the entire Introit, developed in
an alternation of homophone and fugue, corresponding to the text Kirie eleison.
Its increased dramatism is due, on the one hand, to the dotted rhythm from the
incipit of motif β and, on the other hand, to the contrapuntal treatment of voices.
It should be noticed that the section Recviem aeternam could be perceived as an
allusion to the introduction to Mozart‟s requiem, given that Karl Jenkins created
a lyrical sound ambience (i.e. decreased number of instruments, simplified
writing). The atmosphere in Kirie is more sober, classical, traditional, even
though the Welsh musician wrote this section in free polyphony, the expressive
melodic line being obvious through the variation of the initial motif (Kirie, m.
46-72). The leittheme Recviem aeternam in extenso (m.73-90) is reprised
between parts (F-2 m→ G), in A minor tonality. It is followed by section H,
which repeats the same modulating path and the same lyrics aimed at achieving
symmetry. The end is meant to be a short coda, materialized by repeating the
word Requiem in A minor, on a diminished dynamic path, from mf, to pp.
7.1.2. Dies Irae
Focused on the violent images of the Last Judgment, full of confusion and
terror, the well-known sequence Dies Irae (Day of Wrath) comprises
illuminating lyrics: Dies irae, dies illa Solvet saeclum in favilla: Teste David et
Sybilla (Day of wrath and doom impending. David's word with Sibyl's blending,
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Heaven and earth in ashes ending). In the composer‟s postmodern interpretation,
this sequence is developed in extreme dynamism, which stands out from the
introduction as a hellish race (drawing on rhythmic structures from hip-hop
music) built on an ostinato of the low strings.
Figure 3 (Dies irae, m. 1-3)
The violins continuously play the same dotted sounds, repeating the same
note, interrupted by the horns at the end of the phrase, through a three-note
syncopated motif, with ambitus of low third (which later becomes the basic
material in the thematic exposure of the choir). The ff tone has a predominant
role. The structure of this section can be perceived as a rondo, Tuba mirum
being interpreted as a chorus. The choir sings the lyrics based on three motifs:
the first (α) is syncopated, leading to two accentuated rhythmic impulses,
followed by a pause, in which various notes are repeated, and then doubled in
the octave. The countermelody of the horns, chromatically evolving on three
sounds, contributes to the dramatic effect. The second motif, β, reproduces the
dotted rhythm of the violin (ostinato on a sound), accentuating the first syllable.
The third motif, Ω (the chorus Tuba mirum), comprises a suite of augmented
and then diminished third intervals, the previous melody being resumed in the
ostinato technique. The words Dies Irae correspond to a repeated sound, which
is doubled in the higher octave, an interval repeated by the choir in a violent
minimalist way, in a continuous acceleration, until the end of this section.
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Figure 4 (Dies irae, m. 121-124)
The final modulations increase the tension before reaching the conclusion,
the countermelody being built this time on the initial motif, in a syncopated
chromatic evolution, of the trombone. Unlike Mozart‟s version, Jenkins takes
the dynamics of the traditional discourse to the extreme, offering an apocalyptic
picture of the day of wrath.
7.1.3. The snow of yesterday
Inspired by the sensitive text of Gozan‟s Japanese haiku, Hana to mishi
Yuki wa kinuozo Moto no mizu/ The snow of yesterday that fell like cherry
blossoms is water once again, the composer creates a sensitive music of extreme
simplicity. He uses a minimalist technique, Asian instruments (Shakuhachi,
similar to the traditional flute; Chinese bamboo for percussion), as well as an
antiphonal organization of the discourse (dialogue between soprano/chorus and
instrumental ensemble), by resorting to isochronous and isorhythmic structures,
in order to achieve a static, timeless character. In his economy of means, aimed
at highlighting the pentatonic intonations that are resumed in an alternation of E
minor and F minor tonalities, developed in fuzzy dynamics (pp), the author uses
the accompaniment of strings with an ample presence, interrupted in cadences
by arpeggio structures, suggesting a state of meditation, of imponderability. In a
clear contrast to the previous section, Dies irae, rhythmically charged, tense,
The snow of yesterday can be interpreted as an escape in the pursuit of a primary
space, the sacredness of which has been preserved intact.
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Figure 5 (The snow of yesterday, m. 1-10)
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those chansons polifoniques from the 13th – 14th centuries. In our attempt to
interpret the rhythmic and melodic entities of extreme simplicity, in the context
of the evolution of the genre, we are surprised to discover that the postmodern
creator‟s vision is to offer us a new beginning of the sacred, through
concentration and simplification, through repetition, as a symbol of perenniality.
The result is a construct of poetry and sound, conceived in the absence of
exaggeration, pathos or restlessness, due to the fact that Karl Jenkins wishes to
convey a clear message to his contemporaries, representing, in fact, the synthesis
of the original text written following the decision of the Council of Trent: Fount
of pity, then befriend us!
7.1.5. Confutatis
The stanza Confutatis maledectis, Flammis acrisbis addictis; Voca me
cum benedictis (When the wicked are confounded, Doomed to flames of woe
unbounded, Call me with Thy saints surrounded) reveals a calm musical score
for the choir, in F major, the only changes in colour being made by the melodic
tonality, through countermelodies played by the flute or harp, adding the subtle
rhythmic dotting of the percussion. Interestingly enough, the musician takes
over from Mozart‟s homonymous piece only certain passages, in a variational
manner, on which he builds the entire musical development, excluding the
tension of the dotted rhythmic and melodic structures, thus simplifying the
orchestration to the maximum. While the entire rhetoric of Mozart‟s discourse
evolves through the contrast of expression and to all parameters of language on
an ascending line, towards the climax reached in pp, Karl Jenkin equalizes,
simplifies expression, keeping only the essential.
7.1.6. From deep in my heart
Inspired by Issho‟s poem (kokoro kara Yuki utsukushi ya Nishi no kumo),
Karl Jenkins makes another call for musical purity (From deep in my heart / how
beautiful the snow! / clouds in the west). We enter this realm first and foremost
through the pentatonics played by the refined Asian instrument Shakuhachi,
which is complemented by the female voices singing (soprano, mezzo-soprano,
alto) in unison, in the discreet accompaniment of chordophones.
The insertion of subtle vocal effects contributes to the mystery of this
musical piece, by dividing the sopranos. A part of the ensemble sings syllables
from the haiku poem in staccato, piano and counterpoint, while the second
female group repeats the same pentachord, suggesting the search for tranquillity.
This part of the score seems to be inspired from reality, the composer using
simple yet extremely suggestive means. For example, he insists on faded
dynamics (p-pp), resorts to intimist, desolate poetic expressions, renders certain
vocal accents in reduced tones. These are just some of the arguments that could
be advanced to support the idea conveyed by the composer, that of reviving the
sacred in other cultural spaces, which are related to the primordiality of feeling,
of the word, of the static. The composer resorts in these free non-liturgical
sections to the creation of non-evolutional sound images, in order to
metaphorically immortalize eternity, or so it seems.
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7.1.7. Lacrimosa
Lacrimosa is known as the most lyrical section integrated into the
requiem genre: Lacrimosa dies illa, Qua resurget ex favilla, Judicandus homo
reus. Huic ergo, Parce, Deus. Pie Jesus Domine, dona eis requiem, Amen (Ah!
that day of tears and mourning, From the dust of earth returning, Man for
judgement must prepare him, Spare, O God, in mercy spare him. Lord, all-
pitying, Jesus blest, Grant them Thine eternal rest. Amen). This part also
contains the most elaborate music of the entire score. The composer offers, if we
may say so, a noble variation of Mozart's model to which we have referred on
countless occasions in our study. After a short introduction, which is meant to
create the atmosphere, which uses Western and Asian instruments (harps,
darbukas and chordophones), the image of an old music is depicted, the compact
sonority being associated with the timbre of the lute. Lacrimosa is sung in
unison by the entire choir in an emotional ethereal crescendo.
Figure 6 (Lacrimosa, m. 1-6)
The sound variation, created through the mobility of the scales (major-
minor oscillation, alteration of the 4th scale from D major with lyrical
inflections, the use of known variants, harmony and melody) creates the
synthesis between the tonal and the modal, between two different musical
cultures. The contrasts in the musical score stand out. The composer resorts to
harmonic structures, to ample dynamics, in order to underline the verses Pie
Jesus Domine, dona eis requiem (Pious Lord Jesus, Give them rest), alternating
with the vocals from the ascending melodic and harmonic sequences, and
especially with the homophone moment corresponding to the word Amen, when
the voice of the soprano takes over the melody, and the others are meant to
accompany the theme in crescendo.
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7.1.8. Now as a spirit
In the following section, the composer resorts to the haiku written by
Hokusai Hitodama de Yukuki sanjiya Natsu no hara (I shall roam the summer
fields). The correspondence with this poetic text is designed on the background
of the dynamics of the tempo, in a mysterious ambiance, in the development of
which the musician uses the semiquaver in a continuous performance of the
chordophones and of other instruments with a relevant timbre (i.e. harp,
percussion, Shakuhachi). The sopranos, alternating with the altos, sing simple
pentatonic, diatonic or chromatic melodic formulas (the mobility of the 4 th scale)
in high rhythmic values. The sound effect makes clear reference to the Asian
cultural space, as well as to an original time in which the spirit from the present
is in a perpetual search of its former self.
7.1.9. Pie Jesu
The section Pie Jesu (Pie Jesus Domine, dona eis requiem. sempiternam
requiem / Pious Lord Jesus, Give them rest. Everlasting Rest), performed in
slow tempo, in pure neoromantic style, is extremely inspired. How is this
ambience of piety accomplished? The composer combines the liturgical text
from Agnus Dei (Sequenta 5) with the timbre of two horns in F, of the harp and
of a soloist violin, which engage in dialogue with the entire ensemble in rarefied
dynamics and, especially, with a solo tenor. He sings the famous lyrics Pie Jesus
Domine, dona eis requiem in alternance and dialogue with the soprano,
continued by the melodic violin. The melody is extremely simple; it is a
Gregorian chant of absolute purity.
Figure 7 (Pie Jesu, m. 1-10)
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comes in the name of the Lord, interpreted by the men‟s chorus in the form of a
sequence from a Gregorian chant, symbolizing the reiteration of past into the
present. The composer highlights the static by means of an achordic pedal
(superposing the A minor triad with an added quartet structure). The resulting
harmonic structure recomposes the severe, austere ambience from Medieval
cathedrals, where early polyphony forms such as organum paralel were sang.
The intervention of the women's choir consists in interpreting the pentatonic
melodic formulas corresponding to the lines from the Japanese haiku (Tsuki mo
mite Ware wa konyowo kashiku kana/ Even I take leave of this life with a
blessing), the meaning of the test being similar to the liturgical lyrics. In terms
of timbre, the ambiance of a faraway Asian world is brought to the fore through
sounds, throught the countermelody exposed to the mysterious Shakuhachi.
Figure 8 (Having seen the moon, m. 1-10)
Thus, the composer superposes not only texts from different cultures, but
also musical structures with a special sonority which, surprisingly, blend
together perfectly. The sacred space becomes an aspiration for all communities,
regardless of relition, ethnicity, culture, or tradition. The openness to world
music is not coincidental in Jenkins‟ work. For the creator of the music
dedicated to the famous project Adiemus or Missa for Peace, composed with
melodic and timbral inspiration, the combination of intonations from several
cultures is a manner of achieving stylistic individuality in a Postmodern world in
which such blends become almost a means of ensuring creative survival.
7.1.11. Lux aeterna
In the section Lux aeterna, the Jenkins resorts to the text from Communio
- Lux aeterna luceat eis, Domine: Cum sanctis tuis in aeternum, quia pius es.
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Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine Et lux perpetua luceat eis. Cum sanctis tuis
aeternum, quia pius es / May everlasting light shine upon them, O Lord, with thy
saints in eternity, for thou art merciful. Grant them eternal rest, O Lord, and
may everlasting light shine upon them. With Thy saints forever, for Thou art
kind, creating a sound synthesis through the timbre combination proposed in the
discourse (two horns in F, darbuka, tambourine, triangle and chordophones).
Moreover, the musician opts for the pentachordic melodic formula transposed
on different modal centres, which is repeated as a leitmotif throughout the
discourse, evoking and strengthening the relation with the Oriental space.
Furthermore, the timbre solo, accompanied by a dotted rhythm, also reminds us
of the relationship with various musical creations from the nonacademic field,
which is more than welcome in this harmonic, timbral and melodic context. The
lyrics follow a simple Gregorian melodic line, which is no more no less than a
different rendering of the vocal part from Lacrimosa.
7.1.12. Farewell
The correspondence between the lines from Bazan‟s haiku (Mame de iyo
Miwa nara washino Kusa no tsuyu / I pass as all things do like dew on the
grass) is achieved on static music, by superposing a different pedal on an
achordic pedal, in the form of a line from a Gregorian chant (Agnus dei qui tollis
peccata mundi/Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world) sang in
unison my the male group, above which a pentatonic melodic formula is played,
transposed on different levels, according to the relation with the lines from the
haiku. The Shakuhachi, the creator of exotic atmosphere, is not missing either.
Not coincidentally, the composer writes the indication Serenely at the beginning
of the movement, this ambiance succeeding in transposing it with the help of
concentrated musical means, thus creating the image of a transcendent world.
Figure 9 (Farewell, m. 1-9)
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7.1.13. In paradisum18
The final section is concentrated from every point of view. The vocal part
plays a secondary role, with the instruments playing the main part, especially
during the ample harp improvisation. The message is simple: In paradisum
deducant te Angeli; in tuo adventu suscipiant te Martyres, et perducant te in
civitatem Sanctam Jerusalem. Chorus Angelorum te suscipiat, et cum Lazaro
quondam paupere aeternam habeas requiem / May the angels lead you into
paradise; may the martyrs receive you at your arrival and lead you to the holy
city Jerusalem. May choirs of angels receive you and with Lazarus, once (a)
poor (man), may you have eternal rest. The composer ideally believes that that
which the voices cannot render, from a melodic perspective, can be conveyed by
the harp, which, in its purity, becomes another potential messenger of the call
for the unification between music and humankind.
8. Conclusions
Our analysis of Requiem by Karl Jenkins reveals the sensible connection
which the composer created between the Western and the Oriental cultures, as
well as the close correspondence between music and lyrics, the musician
offering Postmodern receivers a duality of expressive forms: on the one hand, he
urges us to dwell on meditation, on recollection, on the return to spirituality; on
the other hand, he proposes a brighter and hopeful vision in recomposing the
sacred universe, accessible to different receivers, regardless of their religious
denomination.
Bibliography
18
Into paradise is an antiphon from the traditional Latin liturgy of the Western Church Requiem Mass.
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