How William Byrd influences music, 400 years after his death
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 7, 2024


How William Byrd influences music, 400 years after his death
Caroline Shaw performs on the second night of the Resonant Bodies Festival at Roulette Intermedium in New York, Sept. 12, 2018. Four popular composers explain how this Englishman’s ideas ricochet through their own works today. (Bryan Thomas/The New York Times)

by David Allen



NEW YORK, NY.- The works of William Byrd hold significant historical interest, but they are also remarkably influential on music that is being written today.

Here are edited excerpts from conversations with four composers who have written pieces directly inspired by Byrd, or who grew up singing in the choral tradition of which he is such an important part.

Roxanna Panufnik

Panufnik, whose body of choral music includes a “Coronation Sanctus,” written for the crowning of Charles III, composed a “Kyrie After Byrd” in 2014 and is working on another response.

I’m really in awe of Byrd. First, how brave he was being a Catholic in such dangerous times, during the Tudors and Queen Elizabeth’s reign. That’s no joke, and thank God he was a musician, because I think that’s probably what saved him. But I love his harmony. Byrd, Tallis and Bach — I think their harmonic changes are more emotional, and sometimes more radical than a lot of 19th-century composers. He was really a man ahead of his time.

Susie Digby formed this professional choir, ORA Singers, and she wanted to do a project where people took their inspiration from Byrd. She particularly wanted for me to do something from his five-part Mass. As soon as I heard the Kyrie, immediately — there’s a certain harmonic U-turn in the middle of the road, in the middle of the stave, and I just thought, “Oh, my goodness, that’s what I want to do.” So I started it like Byrd, but then took it a step even further, or two, or three.

James MacMillan

MacMillan — like Byrd, a committed Catholic — recently wrote “Ye Sacred Muses” for the King’s Singers and Fretwork, the viol consort. The piece employs a text that Byrd used to commemorate Thomas Tallis.

I first got to know his music, and first sang his music, as a teenager at school in Scotland. Our high school choir was singing bits of his four-part Mass. As a fledgling composer, who was very interested in early counterpoint and getting to grips with how you should handle complexity, it was a wonderful lesson in how to make line against line work in a piece of music. His music is known among the singing community, the choral community, but maybe beyond that he’s not as well known as he should be. Classical music audiences tend to forget about the pre-Baroque, and it’s a pity because William Byrd is one of music history’s great figures.

Another wonderful motet by Byrd is “Justorum animae,” which is basically a commemoration or a celebration of martyrs. It’s quite clear whom he means. He was seeing people being put to death because of their faith. I think Byrd and Tallis knew people who were arrested, and I think there were some composers for one reason or another during this time arrested. They must have thought that that could have been in the cards. The only comparable situation today is in dictatorships, behind what was the Iron Curtain — Shostakovich living with fear, with his bag packed, ready to go.

Caroline Shaw

Shaw, a singer, violinist and composer, won the Pulitzer Prize in 2013 for “Partita for 8 Voices.”

I grew up singing in an Episcopal church choir, and I don’t think we really sang much Byrd then. But when I was at Yale, I started singing at Christ Church New Haven, which is a High Anglican church. We would often do the Byrd for Four, Byrd for Five [two of the Masses] at the services in the morning, or the motets. The thing that really is the biggest influence on my writing, and approach to music, is the Compline service, which we would do on Sunday nights at 10 p.m. There are two particular ones that I remember: “Ne irascaris,” which is so beautiful, the one that starts with the men in the bottom and then the higher voices come in later; and “Justorum animae.”

There’s a physical experience to singing Byrd or Tallis, or a lot of that era of music. It’s the feeling of early polyphony and homophony, where they’re just enjoying the sound of voices together, and the beginnings of harmonies moving, and getting to make sound in these beautiful spaces, where the resonance of certain chords is spiritual. The first part of “Partita” that I wrote, which was “Passacaglia” — I wanted to hear the sound of a bunch of voices just kind of chatting gutturally, going into vocal fry and then suddenly exploding into a chord that feels like that, feels like one of those Byrd or Tallis, perfectly voiced chords, just the resonance of it.

Nico Muhly

Muhly grew up singing in an Episcopal church, and continues to write works in the Anglican tradition. Several of his pieces reflect the importance of Byrd, most explicitly “Two Motets,” an orchestration of “Bow thine Ear” and “Miserere mei, Deus.”

For me, the highest form of personal and artistic satisfaction is: Some random introit of mine is happening at Magdalen College, Oxford, and they’re also doing the Byrd “Sing Joyfully.” That, to me, is the pinnacle. You’re in this kind of linked-up way with music whose power comes in completely different ways than the Romantic tradition. Of course, with Byrd, most of it is designed for people to look upward and inward, because it’s sacred music. So for me the project is, how do you bring that into concert music, or how do you write music that is honest and engaged with that tradition, without a fuss?

It’s part of my daily listening, it’s part of my year, in the context of going to church. There’s always a Byrd for something. I do simultaneously love thinking about his political positioning, and I love thinking about the relationship of Catholicism to what he’s doing. But I also feel like what he gets at is a more delicious form of engagement with the ear, which is to say: If you don’t know that — if you don’t know everything that was going on with his faith, and how that was practiced, and where that was practiced — the ear, I think, still can articulate that there’s a deeper well of meaning.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

July 7, 2023

At 20, an upstate arts haven keeps breaking new ground

Rijksmuseum acquires four salt cellars by silversmith Johannes Lutma, following restitution process

Phillips celebrates David Hockney by establishing an annual auction dedicated to the artist's work

Francesco Stocchi bids farewell to Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Success for Bonhams "Paris and The Arab World' sale in Paris

Gagosian announces the publication of "Cy Twombly and the American Critics, 1951 - 1995: A Reception History"

Strong prices across all categories in Koller's June auctions

Paleis Het Loo opens the Junior Palace

"Cinga Samson: Nzulu yemfihlakalo" opening today at White Cube Mason's Yard

South Street Seaport Museum announces expanded digital galleries in collections online portal

Chantilly musée Condé hosting 'Ingres: The Artist and His Princes' in its Jeu de Paume room

Bonhams US aappoints specialist Marissa Speer to lead new Handbag & Fashion department

'VIE I VIDE', new solo exhibition by Huong Dodinh will begin today at Pace Gallery

Brigitte Kowanz and Alejandra Seeber open new exhibition today at Häusler Contemporary

Museum of the Home announces Women's Weeds, uncovering the hidden histories of women in medicine

The exhibition The Joy of Giving opens at Nationalmuseum

Satoshi Itasaka is presenting The Floating Realm at IN'EI Gallery

Conspicuous Gallantry Cross to be sold to support ex-royal Marine's plans to build a retreat for soldiers

Isaac Julien and Andi Galdi Vinko win the 2023 Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards

The gray suit takes center stage

This Bulgarian writer's books bend time

Coco Lee, 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' and 'Mulan' singer, dies at 48

How William Byrd influences music, 400 years after his death

How to Make Background Transparent Without Quality Loss

Know About เว็บตรง100% Multiplayer Games In Online Casinos

Dan Spilo Discusses The Importance Of Having Strategic Talent Management As An Artist

Avoid these mistakes when playing in online casinos

Gambling, betting, and lotteries: What is the difference?

Exploring the Artistic Journey with Wholesale Paint by Numbers Kits

What Are the Luckiest Online Slot Games in 2023?

How to Choose the Best Online Slot Site? Explore the Excitement of Jili Slot Games




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful