J. Thomas Mitts, head of the organ department at Shenandoah University Conservatory of Music in Winchester, Virginia, plays two great French Romantic works on the decidedly French style organ built at Augusta Lutheran Church, Washington, D. C., by Orgues Létourneau in 1999, employing electric stop and combination action and mechanical key action. Marcel Dupré: Symphonie-Passion, Op. 23 (composed 1924) Louis Vierne: Symphony No. 3, Op. 28, for organ (composed 1911)
CD cover: detail of painting Passion by Patti Borden
Notes
on the Music
by J.
Thomas Mitts
Dupré Symphonie-Passion
At his first
recital in America Marcel Dupré improvised a symphony in four movements, an
event the New York press termed “a musical miracle.” The Symphonie-Passion was
improvised two weeks later on December 8, 1921, at the Wanamaker Department
Store in Philadelphia. In his memoirs the composer reflected on that occasion:
“I will never
forget that evening, when, having received themes for the improvisation, I found
that several of them were plainsong melodies, Jesu Redemptor, Adeste
fideles, Stabat mater, and Adoro te. In a flash I had the vision of
a symphony in four movements: the World
Awaiting the Savior, the Nativity, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection, all of
which eventually became my Passion Symphony, which I commenced to
compose on my return to France. When my plan was announced by Dr. Russell the
whole audience stood up, and I played in a state of excitement that I have
rarely known.”
The World
Awaiting the Savior begins solemnly in D Minor, depicting anxiety and
restlessness through a series of dissonant chords in an irregular time
structure that proceeds relentlessly – and is silenced abruptly. In the ensuing
calm the first plainsong melody, Jesu Redemptor omnium (“Jesus, Redeemer
of the World”), is announced and then developed in canon. The uneasiness of the
opening section returns, evermore distraught, until overwhelmed by the
triumphant restatement of the plainsong, again in canon, this time presented in
the major mode accompanied by brilliant chords. After three startling outbursts
of increasing dissonance, the final D Major chord resounds with crystalline
clarity.
The Nativity,
which presents a striking contrast to the opening movement, is a triptyque that
follows the biblical narrative: the first section evokes a pastoral setting
with a haunting oboe solo in an Eastern mode; the second section suggests the
procession of the shepherds and the magi with a “walking” bass; and the third
section depicts the manger scene with Adeste fideles (“O Come, All Ye
Faithful”) first combined with motifs from the preceding sections and then
restated in F-sharp Major, a key often used to depict sublime moments and
supernatural events. The movement ends as the faint “Hallelujahs!” of the
angels echo in the still and peaceful night.
The Crucifixion
is also in three parts: the march to Calvary, the crucifixion, and the vigil at
the foot of the cross. The procession begins with a jagged ostinato (repeated)
bass, over which a stark, slow-moving theme unfolds. With each repetition of
the theme the music becomes louder and more dissonant, the agony more
excruciating, until the theme thunders out in a canon at the fifth, at one
beat’s distance, between the upper voices and the bass. At that point the
central part of the drama occurs: the Crucifixion, climaxing in three loud
cries and seven cluster-chords. In the final section the plainsong Stabat
mater dolorosa (“At the Cross Her Station Keeping”) is used to portray the
long agony of Jesus’s death in the presence of his mother. All motion ceases
except for the repetitions of a falling second, a time-honored gesture used to
depict grief and weeping. The chant is presented alternately in choked phrases
in the treble voice and single-note gasps in the lowest bass notes. The
movement ends in abject silence.
The opening
section of the Resurrection portrays events preceding the dawn of that
first Easter. The plainsong melody Adoro te devote (“Humbly We Adore
Thee”) is presented very softly in long notes in the bass, accompanied by
sinuous melodies developed contrapuntally and restated several times in higher
registers. Short fragments of the plainsong are then emitted in more urgent
rhythms in a tense and dissonant development, acknowledging that fact that
before Christ rose from the dead he first descended into hell. But this is
transcended by a recapitulation in toccata style in which Adoro te
appears again in long notes on the pedal reeds (trombones and trumpets) supporting
a series of canons increasing in complexity and tension, finally exploding into
a cascade of exuberant, exultant chords.
Symphonie-Passion is one of Dupré’s great
achievements, and one of the first great works of ecclesiastical, symphonic
program music for the organ. In his discussion of the Passion Symphony
Abbé Belestre asserted, “During the centuries, the organ has shared the
exultation of peoples’ spirits. It prays, weeps or exults with them. Since
Dupré, it speaks, and with what dramatic eloquence, of the crucified Jesus.”
Georges Humbrecht, the maître-de-chapelle of St. Sulpice, Dupré’s church, said
quite simply that during Mass “When Dupré improvised he prayed.” As for any
other organist, “He improvises, but he does not pray.”
Vierne: Troisème Symphonie, Op. 28
Louis Vierne
composed his Third Symphony in 1911 after a period filled with personal loss
and anguish: he was passed over for the position of Professor of Organ at the
Paris Conservatory by Eugène Gigout; he and his wife of ten years, Arlette
Tasklin, were divorced; his mother died on March 25, 1911; and his dear friend
and mentor, Alexander Guilmant, died only four days later.
In all this he relied closely on the support of his former
student, Marcel Dupré, at whose summer home Vierne completed work on his 3ème
Symphonie. While the work is the most compact of his six symphonies,
Vierne pours into it his torment and remorse, and it becomes, by many peoples’
account, his most successful symphony. It is dedicated to Dupré, who premiered
it during a recital tour of England.
The first
movement, Allegro maestoso, is in sonata form and begins boldly with an
elegiac theme in octaves, marked by sporadic rhythms and punctuated by
diminished-seventh chords. A calmer and more lyrical theme follows, supported
by chromatic harmonies swirling in serpentine lines. A brief but impassioned
development ensues, and a surging crescendo leads to the culmination of the
movement: a repeat of the expository material and a coda concluding the
movement with the same fervor as it began.
The Cantilène
is in ternary (ABA) form, one frequently used in the second movement of a
sonata, and features a lyrical melody in the Locrian mode (distinguished by the
tri-tone). After a more chromatic middle section the Locrian melody returns,
this time accompanied by roulades on the harmonic flute. The Coda recalls the
middle section and concludes the movement with a quiet variation of the first
theme.
The Intermezzo
in D Major is a scherzo in the spirit of Berlioz. The impish, almost
sinister staccato chords are based primarily on the whole-tone scale and give
way to a more lyrical theme set over a dancing bass.
The Adagio in
B Minor, a Song without Words, is inspired by the long winding melodies of
Wagner and Franck. The piece is based completely on material heard in the first
few measures. The melodies are melancholic and full of desire for resolution,
which is exquisitely realized when they serenely reappear in the major mode in
the Coda.
The Final in
F-sharp Minor is a French Toccata in sonata form, based on a melody that
recalls the opening theme of the first movement. The second, more lyrical theme
of this exposition is in the chromatic-mediant key of B-flat Major. After a
sometimes tempestuous development section the opening theme returns in bold
augmentation in the pedal, the contrasting lyrical theme is then pitted against
the more agitated figuration of the Toccata, and in a grand peroration the
symphony ends triumphantly in F-sharp Major.
J. Thomas Mitts
Enthusiastic
reviews applaud the “virtuoso performance by organist J. Thomas Mitts” – a
“sensitive soloist who precisely spelled out the virtuoso passages” in his
appearances as recitalist, soloist and accompanist with orchestras and choruses.
He has performed on numerous concert series and for chapters of the American
Guild of Organists and The Organ Historical Society, and has been a featured
artist in organ festivals in France, Belgium, and Russia.
Dr. Mitts is
Associate Professor of Organ and Director of Church Music Studies at the
Shenandoah Conservatory of Shenandoah University in Winchester, Virginia. He
also serves as Organist and Choirmaster at Augustana Lutheran Church in
Washington, D. C.
Additionally,
he is active as an accompanist, arranger, and conductor, and for several years
was associated with the Adas Israel Congregation and The Master Chorale of
Washington.
Dr. Mitts'
educational background includes the Bachelor and Master of Music degrees from
Louisiana State University and the Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the
University of Iowa. While in college he won numerous awards, including finalist
or winner in several organ playing competitions. Dr. Mitts has held academic
appointments at Cornell College in Mt. Vernon, Iowa, the University of New
Orleans, and Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.
The Organ
The organ was
built by Orgues Létourneau, Ltée., as the firm’s 66th opus and was installed in
the church in 1999. The key action is mechanical (direct linkage from the key
to the valves which open to admit wind to the pipes). The stop action is
electric, thus permitting a comprehensive combination action to control the
stops. The manuals may be coupled either electrically or mechanically. The
Octaves graves in the Récit “couples through” to the Grand Orgue when the
manuals are coupled, but does not couple through to the Pedal, nor does it
affect the stops of the Grand Orgue.
Orgues Létourneau Ltée,
Op. 66, 1999
Augustana Lutheran Church, Washington, D. C.
Grand-Orgue
16 Bourdon
8 Montre
8 Salicional
8 Flûte harmonique
8 Flûte à cheminée
8 Flûtes célestes II
4 Prestant
4 Flûte à fuseau
2 Doublette
2-2/3 Cornet III
1-1/3 Fourniture IV-VI
8 Trompette
Tremblant
Réc. au G-O
Récit (expressive)
8 Montre
8 Cor de nuit
8 Viole de gambe
8 Voix céleste
4 Prestant
4 Flûte octaviante
2 Octavin
1-1/3 Larigot
2 Plein Jeu V
16 Basson
8 Trompette harmonique
8 Hautbois
4 Clairon Harmonique
Tremblant
Octaves graves
Pédale
32 Soubasse (digital)
16 Contrebasse
16 Soubasse
8 Octavebasse
8 Bourdon
4 Basse de choral
32 Contrebombarde (digital)
16 Bombarde
16 Basson (Réc)
8 Trompette
Tirasse Grand-Orgue Tirasse Récit
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