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In the 13th century, St. Thomas Aquinas penned a Latin hymn in praise of the holy sacrament of the last supper in which bread and wine are mystically changed into the body and blood of Christ. Aquinas’ text begins, “Pange lingua, gloriosi” or “Sing, my tongue, the Savior’s Glory.” Aquinas’ words have been set to a melody much older than his text, possibly derived from a Roman marching song or an even earlier Hebrew chant.
On May 21, 1983, this ancient text and tune underwent yet another transformation at the hands of American composer and jazzman Dave Brubeck, when his Pange Lingua Variations for chorus, jazz ensemble and orchestra had its premiere at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Sacramento, California.
In Brubeck’s setting, each stanza is sung first in original Gregorian chant style, followed by a variation. He said, “I searched for the meaning of each stanza, and tried to convey that thought musically, so that each variation is a miniature meditation.” The third variation, taking its cue from the music’s possible origin as a Roman marching tune, is given an appropriately martial treatment by both the chorus and jazz ensemble.
While jazz fans associate Brubeck with the sophisticated jazz he developed in the 50s and 60s, church musicians also know him as the composer of many oratorios on sacred themes, which often incorporate jazz elements into their scoring.
Dave Brubeck (1920-2012): Pange Lingua Variations; Brubeck Quartet; London Voices; London Symphony; Russell Gloyd, conductor; Telarc 80621
4.7
173173 ratings
In the 13th century, St. Thomas Aquinas penned a Latin hymn in praise of the holy sacrament of the last supper in which bread and wine are mystically changed into the body and blood of Christ. Aquinas’ text begins, “Pange lingua, gloriosi” or “Sing, my tongue, the Savior’s Glory.” Aquinas’ words have been set to a melody much older than his text, possibly derived from a Roman marching song or an even earlier Hebrew chant.
On May 21, 1983, this ancient text and tune underwent yet another transformation at the hands of American composer and jazzman Dave Brubeck, when his Pange Lingua Variations for chorus, jazz ensemble and orchestra had its premiere at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Sacramento, California.
In Brubeck’s setting, each stanza is sung first in original Gregorian chant style, followed by a variation. He said, “I searched for the meaning of each stanza, and tried to convey that thought musically, so that each variation is a miniature meditation.” The third variation, taking its cue from the music’s possible origin as a Roman marching tune, is given an appropriately martial treatment by both the chorus and jazz ensemble.
While jazz fans associate Brubeck with the sophisticated jazz he developed in the 50s and 60s, church musicians also know him as the composer of many oratorios on sacred themes, which often incorporate jazz elements into their scoring.
Dave Brubeck (1920-2012): Pange Lingua Variations; Brubeck Quartet; London Voices; London Symphony; Russell Gloyd, conductor; Telarc 80621
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