First Unitarian Choir
Missa Gaia
Voices of Alaskan Tundra Wolf, Humpback Whale and Harp Seals, join the Choir and Orchestra for this live recording of the most popular movements from the original Missa Gaia (Earth Mass). Includes the World Premiere of Prayer for Gaia.
A Mass for the Earth
The Earth, taken as a whole, affects all life and matter around, within and upon our planet with a unique power. This is the basis of the Gaia Hypothesis, a book by James Havelock and Lynn Margulis, who believe that the Earth has a life of its own which is greater than the sum of its parts, that there is an intense synergy between the smallest bacteria and the largest animal and vegetative life. Thus the inspiration for Missa Gaia (Gaia is Greek for Earth).
Addressed to Mother Earth, Earth Mass was first performed at The Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City on Mother's Day, almost thirty years ago. Under the guidance of Paul Winter, each of the members of the Consort composed parts of the Mass. Like the synergy of the natural elements of The Earth, The Paul Winter Consort presents a musical whole—greater than the sum of its parts.
Jim Scott, who performs with us today, describes how he and the Consort created this work:
"We decided that we would be somewhat improvisational, integrating many religious traditions, mixing music of many cultures and even including the voices of other species. The recorded melody from a humpback whale provides the opening motif for the Sanctus. The Kyrie starts with a descending call first stated by the wolf and answered by the sax and choir voices. Paul Halley then developed these two themes into majestic choral works.”
Jim continues, "One of my assignments was the opening Canticle, with the much loved "Brother Sun, Sister Moon" prayer of St. Francis. I wished to unite three widely separated historical periods through music. I opened with a Gregorian chant melody which evolves into the classic American hymn For the Beauty of the Earth and then to contemporary jazz/popular harmonies and an African 12/8 rhythm. Paul Winter suggested setting St. Francis' prayer to a chord progression of mine - two sequences, one rising one falling - that we'd improvised with in previously unused pieces. I assembled the choral piece and we brought back the For the Beauty theme in an elusive harmonization for the finale.
“I particularly wanted to do a setting of The Beatitudes. I particularly like that they are positive. Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount, was saying you will be blessed for this behavior, and this behavior will bring about a blessed state. Musical settings of the Beatitudes are rare, probably because the text does not support music well. I started with the end and took the Beatitudes a little out of order
to provide musical continuity.”
“The Agnus Dei / Dona Nobis Pacem is probably my favorite, and what Paul Winter called "the sleeper" of the whole work. It begins unassumingly enough and then rises to a couple of lush climactic moments before the final section. It was a bit of a challenge to build the choral piece over an instrumental collaboration from a previous album, Callings. This album took the calls of sea mammals as thematic material. Using that piece, with the calls of baby seals, was Paul's idea. He had heard the story of a missionary in the arctic who had discovered that Agnus Dei, or Lamb of God, was not understandable to the Eskimo people, who had never seen lambs. Accordingly, he used the phrase ‘Seal of God.’”
“Two wonderful songs by friends of the Consort round out the whole work. Mystery, by Jeremy Geffen is a deceptively simple and simply beautiful song that touches on the indescribable. The Blue Green Hills of Earth was Paul Winter's adaptation of words from a poem in a Ray Bradbury story and set to music by Kim Olen. This setting made it, in a somewhat altered arrangement, into the new UU Hymnbook as "For the Earth Forever Turning." We hear today the original setting, with the words as they are in Singing the Living Tradition.”
Nightingale
Jacob van Eyck, town carilloneur of Utrecht and virtuoso blockflutist (recorderist), wrote the set of variations on Engels Nachtegaeltje (English Nightingale). The tune originated in England, probably in the 1630s.
Prayer to Gaia
Improvisation for organ, cello, flute, clarinet, recorder, and
sounds of our planet: glacial melt, thunder, ocean waves, and birds.
A small permanent glacier high in the central Colorado Rockies provides the opening backdrop for this premiere performance. Its ice forms shelves that drip into tiny rivulets, eventually joining larger similar rivulets that find themselves swallowed by streams, then rivers, and, ultimately the Pacific Ocean. The Gregorian Chant Picardy, is presented by the cello soon joined by the Recorder flute. Accompanying the Chant is a lone Tinamou bird Crypturellus soui, one of the most ancient birds on earth, archaeologically found in Central and South America, where they still live. They are secretive and shy, and live a quiet, peaceful life. But soon the organ crescendo brings on a passing thunderstorm, and settling back to the Pacific’s waves and birds at La Jolla.
CANTICLE OF BROTHER SUN
Words adapted from “Canticle of of Job
All praise be yours through Brother Sun.
All praise be your through Sister Moon.
By Mother Earth my Lord be praised
By Brother Mountain, Sister Sea.
Through Brother Wind and Brother air.
Through Sister Water, Brother fire
The Stars above give thanks to thee
All praise to those who live in peace.
All praise be yours through Brother Wolf,
All praise be yours through Sister Whale,
By Nature’s Song my Lord be praised
By Brother Eagle, Sister Loon.
Through brother Tiger and Brother Seal.
through Sister Flower, Brother Tree
Let creatures all give thanks to thee
All praise to those who live in peace.
Ask of the Beasts/Trees/Flowers and they shall each you the beauty of the Earth.Brother Sun” by St. Francis of Assisi and the Book
KYRIE
The Kyrie, prayer for mercy, contains the only Greek words left in the western form of the Church Mass. The Alaskan tundra wolf whose voice this Kyrie was based on, sings the same four-note howl seven times in an interval known as the tritone—the sax, tenor, solo voices and chorus answering. The double-bell rhythm comes from Ghana.
ADORO TE DEVOTE
Traditional Gregorian chant, words by St. Thomas Aquinas c. 1260
Adoro te devote, latens Deitas
Quae sub his figuris verelatitas
Tibi sicor meum totum subjicit
Quia te contemplans totum deficit…
FOR THE BEAUTY OF THE EARTH
For the beauty of the earth, sing, oh sing today
Of the skies and of our birth, sing, oh sing, always.
Nature human and divine, all around us lies.
Lord of all to Thee we raise grateful hymns of praise.
SANCTUS
(Traditional Latin words)
In Paul Winter’s words, “If any animal on Earth symbolizes the Great Mother, it is the whale…I was told the Sanctus should be jubilant and that’s how I hear the whale’s song…Any species that has flourished for 50 million years ought to be jubilant.” (Humpback whale recorded at Big Sur.)
AGNUS DEI
“The inspiration for this Agnus Dei came from a missionary to Labrador in 1909. In trying to find a symbol for “Lamb of God” that the Eskimos would understand, the translation of “kotik,” or young seal, was used. With its perfect whiteness, its gentle, helpless nature, and especially its innocent eyes, the image of a seal pup as the Lamb of God was apt.” The voices in the background are harp seals, recorded on the ice near the Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
Agnus Dei qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis, dona nobis pacem.
O Lamb of God, that takest away the sins of the world, have mercy upon us.
Grant us thy peace.
THE BLUE GREEN HILLS OF EARTH
For our lives for all creation, sing we our joyful praise to Thee.
For the mountains, hills and pastures, in the silent majesty,
For the earth forever turning, for the skies for ev’ry sea.
For all life, for all of Nature, sing we our joyful praise to Thee.
For the sun, for rain and thunder; for the land that makes us free;
For the stars, for all the heavens, sing we our joyful praise to Thee.
For the earth forever turning, for the skies of ev’ry sea.
To our Lord we sing returning to our blue-green hills of earth.
Acknowledgements
Missa Gaia is copyrighted 1982 by Living Music Records to whom we are grateful for permission to perform in our church service. In addition, we appreciate the instrumental score realizations by John Delorey and Jim Scott. Wolf recording courtesy Dr. Michael Fox. Musical wren (Amazon Forest) courtesy of Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. The earth sounds in Return to Gaia were meticulously recorded by Doug Von Gausig, provided and copyrighted by NatureSongs.com, 2007.
New Age: Environmental