Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season May-June 2016 | Page 28

{ program notes Grammy award for best chamber music/ small ensemble performance in 2014.  A New York native, Mr. Burton earned his bachelor’s degree from Oberlin College Conservatory of Music, and a master’s degree from Yale University. Dashon Burton is making his BSO debut. The Baltimore Choral Arts Society Tom Hall Music Director For The Baltimore Choral Arts Society’s bio., please see pg. 21. About the concert: Mass in B Minor, BWV 232 Johann Sebastian Bach Born in Eisenach, Thuringia, March 21, 1685; died in Leipzig, Saxony, July 28, 1750 Johann Sebastian Bach’s B Minor Mass is generally ranked alongside Beethoven’s Missa solemnis as one of the two greatest settings of the Mass in musical history. But the story of how it came into being is full of mysteries, and Bach certainly did not set out to compose it from beginning to end in a single time period as Beethoven did his. Instead, it became the magnificent compilation of his life’s work as a composer, a compendium of what he considered to be his best music, refashioned and miraculously shaped into one monumental whole. A large portion of the B Minor dates back to a difficult period in Bach’s career in 1733, when his frequently unappreciative employers on the Leipzig municipal council seemed to be trying to push him out of his post as the musical director of the city’s St. Thomas Church. Realizing his precarious position, Bach approached the newly appointed Elector of Saxony, Friedrich August II, who reigned at the Saxon capital of Dresden, seeking a possible appointment there. The Dresden court was rich, cosmopolitan, and boasted a superb ensemble of instrumentalists and singers, and its new Elector was a Roman Catholic. So Bach created the Kyrie and Gloria portions of the Mass and sent them with an obsequious 26 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org note to Friedrich August asking him to accept “this trifling token of what science I have achieved in music.” The Kyrie and Gloria were no trifles, but what Bach got in return was: a minor appointment with a modest sum attached, which was not even granted until 1736. The Mass project then came to a halt for more than a decade. Today musicologists believe that the creation of a complete Mass setting waited until the last years of Bach’s life, probably between August 1748 and October 1749. The newly composed portions of the B minor were probably the last compositions Bach ever wrote, for he was now in poor health and going blind. The B Minor Mass was almost certainly never performed in its entirety during Bach’s lifetime, for its vast dimensions could never fit into the confines of a church service. Instead, it was a work for the future — for the concert halls that did not yet exist. In fact, it had to wait more than a century for its first full performance, which took place in Leipzig in 1859. Bach roots its opening chorus in ancient tradition with the tenors intoning the Gregorian chant associated with the Credo. The B minor’s Music Composers of the Baroque period did not consider it plagiarism to borrow from either another composer’s works or their own earlier ones to craft a new work; it was standard practice and almost considered a compliment to the original. And so Bach based many of the B minor’s numbers on works he’d written before, both sacred and secular, and generally in the German language. But he chose with unerring skill what would suit a specific text and mood of the Mass and revised the original extensively for its new setting. He freely mixed in styles derived from secular genres such as opera, dance, concerto and the secular cantata into this sacred music. The solo portions of the B Minor were especially based on secular sources. The B Minor Mass is the apotheosis of Baroque contrapuntal art: the interweaving of many independent melodic lines. This contrapuntal writing involved both a brilliant, well-stocked orchestra and a chorus divided into four, or more usually, five parts. Bach created extraordinary counterpoint for them, often in fugues b