A
Unique Landmark: Chants of the Russian Diaspora
A new CD has been released in San Francisco. This CD, Chants
of the Russian Emigres, is a historic milestone: all
the hymns recorded on it are exclusively by composers of the
Russian emigration. This is the first such recording of its
type. As is well known, one of the consequences of the catastrophe
which befell Russia in 1917 was the flight of several million
Orthodox people abroad. Having settled in various countries,
they continued in those foreign lands the age-old tradition
of church music which was violently interrupted in their homeland.
The composers who left Russia did not bury the talent entrusted
to them by God, but, on the contrary, under the difficult
conditions of the emigration, not only preserved it, but even
increased it. The composition and harmonization of Russian
church hymns became for them one of the means of expressing
their love for God, their dedication to the Orthodox Church,
and their commitment to the future of Russia. If in Babylonian
captivity the chosen people posed the question: How
shall we sing the Lords song in a strange land,
the Russian people who found themselves in exile and who chose
Christ were able to survive in foreign countries precisely
because they sang the Lords song in a strange land.
It was these strange lands which, in the context of the historical
and spiritual catastrophe of Russia, enabled them fully to
understand and be aware of how short, how illusory our life
is; how much more sublime the internal is as compared to the
external. This, in turn, found expression in their spiritual
creativity. The composers of the Russian diaspora do not so
much constitute a particular school as a definite direction
in church music. A group of church musicians was formed, who
continued the tradition of studying and reworking the old
church chants, as well as the experience of free composition
in the best traditions of the Russian ecclesiastical music
of the early 20th century.
With the lifting of the Iron Curtain, the idea occurred to
us to record a CD of church music exclusively by composers
of the Russian exiles, and sung by a church choir in the former
Soviet Union. In connection with the changes which have taken
place in Russia, the time has come to return church treasures
to the motherland, one of which is the heritage of church
choral music. The heritage entrusted by God to the Russian
emigres: that which was saved, preserved and increased in
exile is being returned to the native land. The mission of
the Russian exile community is reaching its end.
We hope that what is best within the church music tradition
of the Russian diaspora will help to promote the regeneration
of church music in Russia, and that this, in turn, will prove
to be a contribution toward the rebirth of parish life. Apart
from the original objective of our project, the present recording
may also serve as a model for small parish choirs which desire
to follow a stricter tradition of Russian Orthodox choral
music. By no means are all the composers of the Russian emigration
represented on the disc. Archbishop Gabriel (Chepur), Alexander
Glazunov, Andrew Ilyashenko, Nicholas Kedrovpere, and Nicholas
Kedrov fils, Maxim Kovalevsky, Ivan Kolchin, Michael Konstantinov
and Boris Ledkovsky belonged to different generations, possessed
different levels of musical education, lived in different
countries, and belonged to different branches of Orthodoxy.
Several of them were composers of wide repute, others lived
in obscurity; the legacy of the church music of some was vast,
while others wrote only a few church pieces. However, all
of these composers lived the dream of the future rebirth of
Russia and its highest religious traditions.
God willing, we hope in the future to continue as a series
The Heritage of the Church Choral Music of the Russian
Emigres, which has been initiated by the present recording.
Archpriest
Peter Perekrestov
REVIEW:
This is a unique landmark CD, the first to focus entirely
on the sacred chant arrangements and compositions of Russian
expatriates, who left their homeland to escape the godless
Communist regime, yet continued to carry forward the creative
currents that had already arisen before the 1917 Revolution
in the works of such composers as Kastalsky, Chesnokov, Gretchaninoff,
and Rachmaninoff. The selections are beautifully sung by a
choir in the former Soviet Union, representing a poignant
"homecoming" of sorts for this music. The church
choir of SS Peter and Paul Church, numbering about 16 singers,
could be the envy of any Orthodox parish: the singing is sensitive
and tuneful, showing excellent dynamics, ensemble, and phrasing.
The editors and consultants of the CD did their research,
unearthing biographical details and rare portraits for most
of the composers. The repertoire is also extraordinarily interesting,
many of the works being recorded for the first time ever...
The disc edition is entirely bi-lingual, featuring notes and
titles in Russian and English.
Vladimir Morosan
The
new CD (sung in Church Slavonic) is available from:
In the U.S.A.
($17.00 US + $3.00 shipping & handling):
Synod Bookstore
75 East 93rd Street
New York, NY 10128 USA
(212) 534-1601
Holy Trinity Monastery Bookstore
PO Box 36
Jordanville, NY 13361 USA
St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral Bookstore
200 Alexander Avenue
Howell, NJ, 07731 USA
Holy Virgin Cathedral Bookstore
6200 Geary Boulevard
San Francisco, CA 94121, U.S.A.
In Europe
(15 EUROS + postage)
Couvent de Lesna
1, rue du Moulin
Provemont, 27150 Etrepagny, FRANCE
In AUSTRALIA
($27.00 AUS + shipping & handling):
Holy Virgin Protection Church Bookstore
136 John Street
Cabramatta, NSW, 2166, AUSTRALIA
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