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“It is fitting that the body simultaneously with the soul repeatedly sing praises to God through the voice . . . Therefore, those of the Church who have imposed silence on the singing of the chants for the praise of God without well-considered weight of reason so that they have unjustly stripped God of the grace and comeliness of His own praise, unless they will have freed themselves from their errors here on earth, will be without the company of the angelic songs of praise in heaven.” LIBBY LARSON (b. 1950) • • • • • • • • • • represents typical 20th-C composer Born 1950 Rec’d college ed. Earned BA, MM, and DMA degrees from Univ. MN Gained popularity in a time when both male and female composers have trouble “selling” their works Work encompasses wide variety of genres: Chamber music Dance Opera Works for orchestra and chorus • Texted works receive the most documentation • Best suitable for the Western canon’s “feminine” compositional sphere • Feature: beautiful melodies, transparent textures, gentle timbres, and simple forms • She allows the text to guide the music Missa Gaia: A Mass for the Concert Hall • Good example of a late 20th Century mass • Work that is regarded as an EXAMPLE of a composition by a woman, while at the same time respected by the general concert-goer • Uses traditional Latin titles: Kyrie, Gloria, Credo Agnus/Dei/Sanctus, Benediction • Remaining text IN ENGLISH, avoids traditional liturgical language entirely TEXT •From a variety of sources: Works of Dominican mystic Meister Eckhart Jesuit priest - Gerard Manley Hopkins Native American poet – Joy Harjo Bible Chinook Psalter •All movements are unified •Focuses on relationship between individuals and the earth •Theme of circles are used throughout the piece—identifying at times with the circular rhythms of the life cycle •She does this musically in a variety of ways, including the use of OCTAVES (notes spaced eight tones apart – C-C) FORM •Simple (like the Kyrie of the Mass) Two repetitions of unison melodic lines that expand to harmonized sections •Use of oboe (pensive, nasal eerie sound) in brief intro and slow tempo to allow for reflection on the traditional penitence of the Kyrie •Uses DISSONANCE (combination of tones that sound unstable—need resolution) for text setting Depict words “suffer” and “mock” 1 Sofia Gubaidulina SOFIA GUBAIDULINA (b. 1931) •Russian composer by birth • Born 1931 •Studied piano and composition at the Kazan Conservatory •Rec’d graduate composition degree from the Moscow Conservatory •When ready to leave the Conservatory, Russian composer Dimitri Shostakovich encouraged her to continue on her “mistaken path” •“To the Soviets, extreme dissonance was as aesthetically unacceptable as the religious themes that Gubaidulina favored, but kept hidden from view.” •Spent much time working under the artistic limitations of communism •Makes BIG headway after she leaves Russia •Like Hildegard: works written in a restricted environment that could not contain the expression of her deep spirituality •Regarded by the Soviet public as a composer of film music •Her innovative work is in the field of art music •She expresses her spirituality using dissonant harmonic language—quite different from Larson •Compositional style: •Formally complex •Highly symbolic •She places her work along the same lines as J. S. Bach—connects her compositions with personal spirituality •Underlying mathematical structure form •“Frequently uses the quarter-tone as a metaphor of an image and its shadow” Seven Words of Christ from the Cross (1982) • Work that focuses on the seven final phrases that Christ speaks when He is on the Cross • Taken from the four Gospels of the New Testament • “Father, forgive them, they know now what they do” • “My God, my God, why has Thou forsaken me” • “It is finished” • Gubaidulina portrays the agony and horror of the crucifixion only using instruments—NO text References to the crucifixion: • 1st and last mvts: expands musical texture from a single note to over six octaves • In the music notation, this looks like a cross •MVT VI “It is Finished” – uses three different layers of sound: string orchestra, cello, and bayan (Russian button accordion) •References to Christ’s struggle between death and life: •Use of dissonance and less obvious structural devices “The bayan soloist, for example, creates a dissonant sound by performing a glissando with the bellows while holding down neighboring buttons on the instrument, but is also symbolically ‘crossing’ one sound over the other. The cellist alludes to the crucifixion by ‘crucifying’ the string with the bow, and by ‘cutting through’ the texture of the music with chords. By the start of the final movement, the cellist gradually moves the bow until it rests just under the bridge, symbolizing the transition of Christ out of this world.” SUMMARY How do gender qualifications affect women composers? • Larson – work is associated w/feminine side • Gubaidulina’s work with the male side (harsh dissonance, mathematically structure form, overall complexity) • Subject matter: Seven Last Words – terror, death, ugliness – aligned w/male gender • Women have been assigned gender roles regarding types of instruments they chose to use, forms, and less aggressive rhythms • Spirituality: •Western music deeply rooted in spiritual traditions •Women have always expressed their spirituality through music •Because it has not been documented w/reference to women, it appears they either were incapable or uninterested