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Leonard Bernstein: Mass
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Leonard Bernstein: Mass
Current price: $31.99
Barnes and Noble
Leonard Bernstein: Mass
Current price: $31.99
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Leonard Bernstein
's Mass: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers was given a mixed reception upon its premiere as the inaugural production at the opera house of
the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
in Washington, D.C., on September 8, 1971. A double-LP box set recording followed in the fall, and there were performances in several cities the next year, but the work, which mixed popular music genres with classical ones, never attracted a wide following. More than 30 years later, however, three recordings appeared during the first decade of the 21st century, one by
the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
conducted by
Kent Nagano
and made in November 2003; a second by
the Tonkuenstler-Orchester
(the State Orchestra of Lower Austria) conducted by
Kristjan Jaervi
and made in February 2006; and this one by
the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
Marin Alsop
and made in October 2008. While these versions are clearly inferior to the one
Bernstein
himself conducted in 1971, they serve to alert 21st century listeners that the composition is not just a time capsule of its era. That's the way some saw it in the early '70s, when it seemed of a piece with several other musical theater works that attempted to use the Christian religion to comment on the social turmoil of the period, notably Jesus Christ Superstar and Godspell, the latter written by
Stephen Schwartz
, who also co-wrote the lyrics to Mass. In each work, the tradition-encrusted tale of Christ's life was contemporized in song with an emphasis on skepticism and even cynicism, sung in vernacular language and expressed musically in styles of rock and pop.
's version, based on the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Mass, was the most musically ambitious and eloquent, tracing the ways in which Christian belief could be perverted and questioned. Creating a government-commissioned work, he may have been trying to "catch the conscience of the king," in his case,
President Richard Nixon
, who failed to attend the premiere. But his and
Schwartz
's attack on those who use Christianity for their own ends, as expressed in
"God Said,"
with its specious justifications for anti-environmentalism and warmongering, must sound only too familiar to listeners familiar with the policies of
President George W. Bush
, who was in the White House when all three of the newer recordings were made. Sometimes, it seems the best way to be timeless is to be timely. As such,
Alsop
, like
Jaervi
and
Nagano
, had the potential to create a version of Mass that spoke to her own generation as
attempted to speak to his. In all three cases, that opportunity has been squandered, however, and oddly enough in much the same ways. While the 1971 recording was full of impassioned performances reflecting the ripped-from-the-headlines quality of the writing,
, just like
did, treats the work largely as a museum piece, rendering it as though it were some dusty opera, without much conviction. Musically,
, again like
, hews far closer to the classical elements in the score, giving only cursory treatment to the pop music parts, which unbalances the work. If new recordings of
's Mass can reawaken debate about a composition that deserves to be remembered, what it really should do is send the curious back to the initial version. Perhaps a theatrical production handled by people less tied to the classical realm could bring the work back in a more meaningful way. ~ William Ruhlmann
's Mass: A Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers was given a mixed reception upon its premiere as the inaugural production at the opera house of
the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
in Washington, D.C., on September 8, 1971. A double-LP box set recording followed in the fall, and there were performances in several cities the next year, but the work, which mixed popular music genres with classical ones, never attracted a wide following. More than 30 years later, however, three recordings appeared during the first decade of the 21st century, one by
the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
conducted by
Kent Nagano
and made in November 2003; a second by
the Tonkuenstler-Orchester
(the State Orchestra of Lower Austria) conducted by
Kristjan Jaervi
and made in February 2006; and this one by
the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
Marin Alsop
and made in October 2008. While these versions are clearly inferior to the one
Bernstein
himself conducted in 1971, they serve to alert 21st century listeners that the composition is not just a time capsule of its era. That's the way some saw it in the early '70s, when it seemed of a piece with several other musical theater works that attempted to use the Christian religion to comment on the social turmoil of the period, notably Jesus Christ Superstar and Godspell, the latter written by
Stephen Schwartz
, who also co-wrote the lyrics to Mass. In each work, the tradition-encrusted tale of Christ's life was contemporized in song with an emphasis on skepticism and even cynicism, sung in vernacular language and expressed musically in styles of rock and pop.
's version, based on the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Mass, was the most musically ambitious and eloquent, tracing the ways in which Christian belief could be perverted and questioned. Creating a government-commissioned work, he may have been trying to "catch the conscience of the king," in his case,
President Richard Nixon
, who failed to attend the premiere. But his and
Schwartz
's attack on those who use Christianity for their own ends, as expressed in
"God Said,"
with its specious justifications for anti-environmentalism and warmongering, must sound only too familiar to listeners familiar with the policies of
President George W. Bush
, who was in the White House when all three of the newer recordings were made. Sometimes, it seems the best way to be timeless is to be timely. As such,
Alsop
, like
Jaervi
and
Nagano
, had the potential to create a version of Mass that spoke to her own generation as
attempted to speak to his. In all three cases, that opportunity has been squandered, however, and oddly enough in much the same ways. While the 1971 recording was full of impassioned performances reflecting the ripped-from-the-headlines quality of the writing,
, just like
did, treats the work largely as a museum piece, rendering it as though it were some dusty opera, without much conviction. Musically,
, again like
, hews far closer to the classical elements in the score, giving only cursory treatment to the pop music parts, which unbalances the work. If new recordings of
's Mass can reawaken debate about a composition that deserves to be remembered, what it really should do is send the curious back to the initial version. Perhaps a theatrical production handled by people less tied to the classical realm could bring the work back in a more meaningful way. ~ William Ruhlmann