Fragile
A Requiem for Male Voices
Pierre de la Rue (1460?–1518): Missa pro fi delibus defunctis
Ludwig Thomas · Sting · Kurt Weill · Einojuhani Rautavaara
Hans Schanderl · Knut Nystedt · Eric Clapton
Die Singphoniker
Fragile – the famous song from Sting’s album “Nothing
Like the Sun” is likewise the title of the new CD
of the vocal sextet “Die Singphoniker”. Renaissance
composer Pierre de la Rue and his requiem “Missa pro
fidelibus defunctis” are the focus of this program of
works, which all deal with the finite nature of human
beings. The ensemble creates a mood of contemplation
surrounding one of the basic themes of all times,
contrasting the requiem, which was composed ca.
1500, with music of our age. Sting’s “Fragile” is just
as much a part of this as music by Einojuhani Rautavaara
and Kurt Weill, while gospel songs like “Deep
River” and Eric Clapton’s “Tears in Heaven” are also
incorporated.
The Singphoniker have just recently recast a
number of positions, now cultivating old strengths
with younger forces. Characteristic for the group is
the sheer disarming ease of the upper voice, sung by
a countertenor, resting on the powerful, incredibly
colorful foundation of bass to tenor voices. When the
Singphoniker sing so-called “light music”, it loses all
its supposed superficiality, and they present so-called
“serious” repertoire with a naturalness that rapidly
helps listeners lose their
guardedness
fragile
Encounter
We were supposed to learn de la Rue’s Missa
pro fidelibus defunctis – a requiem of the Renaissance
– for a concert. We had barely heard
of the composition or the composer before.
Always curious about unfamiliar material, we
set to work. Having had some difficulty in
unearthing the sheet music in the first place,
an initial reading threw up a whole series of
questions related to practical performance.
The music was “only” available in the standard
form for collected editions, which made
it essential to work out an arrangement for
the “singphonic” approach to singing. We
had never come across a work with such a
low register before. The deepest bass reaches
down to contra B-flat. The “second lowest”
bass should still be able to reach the great
C. The composition also switches between
various combinations of singers, from two
to five voices. The editors point out that this
deep register was widespread in the region
at that time and they also suspect that the
individual phrases were sung by different
groups of singers. They assign the voices of
Introitus and Agnus Dei to up to four basses
and one tenor. Other parts of the mass are
shared between a countertenor, two tenors
and a bass. And rhythmically there are sections
that seem unfamiliar to the majority of
today’s musicians and are only used widely
again in new music. The simultaneous overlapping
of various types of beat, for example,
was very common at that time. The sequence
of movements is also interesting. The source
text differs from the requiem settings that we
are all familiar with, by following Introitus
and Kyrie with the insertion of the Psalm
“Sicut cervus desiderat” as Tractus, without
the usual Dies irae here; it also differs from
today’s standard liturgical sequence with the
Tractus Absolve Domine. If we compare de la
Rue’s dates (1460?–1518) to the history of the
church (Tridentine Council 1545–1563), this
departure could be explained by the fact that
the form of the Requiem was fixed in writing
for the first time there, which is why the
Franco-Flemish composer chose this arrangement.
Despite these many questions, the
music that we were able to draw out of the
requiem – from the first time that we sung it
– immediately held a particular fascination.
We found ourselves transported to a distant
epoch, into a strangely alien space of sound,
many of the details of which appeared to be
unclear or shrouded in darkness. It was certainly
mysterious, but it had a spiritual force
that immediately captivated and overpowered
our souls, awakening the desire to linger
in this music. An exploration with all our
senses of what an important musician of that
time (we recognized that very quickly) has to
say on the subject of “transience”. In this thematic
aspect, we immediately felt ourselves
close to de la Rue across the ages. This was,
perhaps, a crucial connection right from the
outset which, coupled with our artistic drive
and an appropriate amount of curiosity, challenged
our ambition to “crack” the parts that
were as yet unknown to us.
Approach
We discussed the problem of the low register
with experts in old music and listened
carefully to the few recordings that had been
made. Our conclusion then: the “profoundly
deep” parts should sound as “profoundly
deep” as possible. The tuning pitch was relative
at that time, there was no concert pitch
A with 440 Hz as there is today. We did not
want to use instruments, the range of which
could strengthen the bottom notes – which
had also been the historical practice in previous
performances. Our challenge was to
explore the boundaries at the bottom of the
scale as far as possible. At the same time it
was obvious that vocal sound at the bottom
of the range loses tonal intensity and dynamic
scope, a limitation that was worth taking
into consideration. In the end, we were able
to find a transposition plan which made it
possible to create “as dark a sound as possible”
for the deep parts of the requiem, while
making the most of the “specific singphonic
possibilities”. Subsequently, we entered this
sound space time and again, with the aim
of making ourselves at home in it. We had
actually felt comfortable in it right from the
start. We noticed that after a lengthy absence,
we always had to work hard to gain access
to it again. Still today, many sections want
to be discovered and illuminated anew every
time. Singing de la Rue means leaving familiar
singphonic ground for us, which, after all,
ranges from Gregorian chants to contemporary
music and therefore does not have many
limitations. Once we had properly arrived
there, we seemed to hover in the music, as it
were. Everything seemed weightless. A stream
of tones, transcendental and timeless in its
effect. Like a perfectly constructed building,
ideal in form, well proportioned, reduced to
its essentials, as a result absolutely compelling
in what it had to say, then, today and
always. But are there differences in the way in
which people – as interpreters and listeners –
experienced the music at that time and experience
it today? If so, what are they? Should
historical transposition (or what we understand
by that today) be a relevant approach
to interpretation for us? In order to do justice
to a composer of this sort, should we attempt
to silence hundreds of years of music history,
to suppress? All of this was part of the process
of approaching the music.
Extension
Arriving in a space, accepting it and moving
into it also means arranging it as you want
it. The atmosphere and tonal characteristics
of this work led us to the bold idea of bring
ing it into contact with the music of today.
After all, we had a theme: death, transience,
the fragility of all existence. In this context,
de la Rue’s work could be seen as the powerful
stone structure of an old cathedral,
a clear and dominant external form, into
which contemporary accents can be placed,
connected in terms of content, like newly
designed stained glass windows. What would
happen if we brought the music of today
with us into this soundspace? To do so, we
had to find the courage to break the work
up, dissect it into its constituent parts. The
question as to where the points of contact
with the music of our age might be was the
easier one. But which music would fit in?
The most important principle in the search,
even more important than the thematic connection,
was respect for de la Rue’s composition.
With that in mind, we set off on our
search for potential “windows”. “Death and
transience” is one of the central themes of
humanity, and of music too. It does not always
have to be a requiem, or even spiritual
music. The “Singphoniker” would not be the
“Singphoniker” if we had not truly attempted
to break down every conceivable barrier in

this undertaking that crossed many borders.
In searching for connections and contrasts,
we also came across the title for the program.
It was “fragile”. A word that comes from the
Latin (fragilis) and exists in English, French,
Italian and German. Also a wonderful song
by Sting. Finally, an arrangement had been
found that seemed to us to be full of contrast
and in which, at the same time, anyone who
wanted to could find multiple connections
(wherever we could we even gave consideration
to related keys in the links, making
many of the transitions more fluent). A piece
by Ludwig Thomas forms the introduction:
“Mein junges Leben hat ein End” (“My
young life is coming to an end”). The melody
is based on Sweelinck’s familiar work which
is often played on the organ. Three verses of
a contrapuntal vocal movement, in the style
of the original. Then, still before the Missa
begins, “fragile” by Sting. One of his most
popular songs, also the first track on his
live album recorded on September 11, 2001.
The arrangement written by Patrick Ehrich
for the Singphoniker opens up some new
aspects of the original. Then, finally, de la
Rue: Introitus. After the first two contrasting
impressions, entry into the sound space that
provides the framework and our first concentrated
treatment of it. Then what is perhaps
the harshest contrast: Kurt Weill’s “Zu Potsdam
unter den Eichen” (“Potsdam under the
oaks”) from his Berliner Requiem. A musical
accompaniment for the funeral procession of
a soldier who fell in the war: strange echoes
of a march, aggression held back with difficulty,
a blazing condemnation of senseless
death. A secular “Lord have mercy on us”?
That follows in spiritual form in the Kyrie
of the Missa, which modifies Weill’s strong
emotion. Rautavaara’s Baudelaire arrangement
“La mort des pauvres” (“The death of
the poor”) shows us in mysteriously hymnlike
tones death as salvation from the earthly
vale of tears. The moment in this composition
in which, following tones that soar
upwards powerfully, the gate to eternity, to
paradise, seems to open, shining brightly, is
indescribable. The following Tractus of the
requiem “Sicut cervus desiderat” is perhaps
the yearning for God turned into music.
When will we finally leave everything earthly
behind us and stand before God? In “Deep
river”, too, this yearning for the promised
land in which all is peace can be felt. At the
same time, it is mixed with the hope of salvation
in paradise. The Offertorium follows,
the song that accompanies the offering. In
this varied section, Gregorian intonations for
one voice are followed by parts for two, four
or five voice in various beats and tempos.
Hans Schanderl’s composition “Whispers of
Heavenly Death” fits in a very special way
into the overall concept of the CD. Even
the whispered beginning makes your ears
prick up and draws you into its spell from
the outset. The polyphonic network of lines
repeatedly recalls distant epochs and creates
moments of meditation of great peace. At the
same time, expressive vocal sforzati provide
exciting accents, combined with soaring,
overpowering concentrations of sound that
recur repeatedly. The music speaks of floods
of tears, a whispering behind them. Through
cloud formations, a distant star now shines.
An insurmountable barrier becomes visible,
which only the soul is able to cross. Its final
tones flow almost directly into the Sanctus
of the Missa. Centuries of musical development
seem to have vanished at this moment,
without any significance. For us, this
is perhaps the most fascinating moment of
this compilation, when the sounds melt to
form a new whole. The Sanctus is solemn,
tonally opulent, at the same time rhythmically
varied, of great intimacy in the Benedictus.
Magnificent music by a great master. In
Nystedt’s “Peace, I leave with you”, words of
St John are the template for music which, in
gently varying shades of tone, tells of peace
of a sort not found on earth, but which God
alone can grant. Our greeting of peace. One
last time we turn to the mass. The “Agnus
Dei” for five voices rings out in dark colors
reminiscent of the opening. A short “Lux aeterna”
for four voices closes the requiem in a
conciliatory, bright major key. Eric Clapton
won a Grammy in 1993 for the pop ballad
“Tears in Heaven” that follows. Despite the
major key, the melancholic piece is about the
grief of those who are left behind after the
death of a loved one – in Clapton’s case, after
the tragic accidental death of his four-yearold
son. Remaining behind in the knowledge
that they do not yet belong in heaven and
must continue to find their way through the
days and nights. Here, too, is the ancient
motif of yearning for peace in the after-life
and a heaven without tears. At the very end
stands the Abendlied “Der Mond ist aufgegangen”
(“The moon has risen”). The words
of Matthias Claudius and the melody of
Peter Schulz have a fixed place in the German
repertoire of songs. Ludwig Thomas has
found wonderful tones for the rising moon,
the distant starry sky, the plea for peaceful
sleep, a gentle death and being accepted into
heaven.
Something new?
What are we left with in the end? The destruction
of the unity and coherence of a
unique requiem composition? An over-ambitious
arrangement of individual pieces of
music with a set of contrived links? Clumsy
transitions, if you can even call them that?
A strange stylistic puzzle, perhaps even the
violation of music torn from its “natural context”?
We had to keep asking ourselves these
questions and checking our answers to them
as assiduously as possible.
Something new!
At the end of our encounter with … approach
to … and extension of the material
and theme, we believe that there is a strong
chance that a new whole has been created.
In concerts with this program arrangement
we have become certain that – the thematic
links apart – flowing connections can be created
across perceived eternities of musical
history and also across styles that seem to
be galaxies apart through song in particular.
The way in which the voice, which has been
the human instrument since our origins and
the essence of which has always remained
the same, spontaneously creates powerful
and profoundly organic connections repeatedly
leaves us speechless. At least we have a
kind of certainty that this is what happens, a
certainty that grows from this root and that
we feel deep in our souls as singers. Then all
we can do is hope that our listeners will feel
the same about the composition. It would be
wonderful if the sound space of the CD invited
listeners to keep spending time in it in
contemplation, discovering as they do so new
facets and hidden variety. And we also allow
ourselves to hope that it is music in particular,
which is so fleeting and appears to lack
substance, that is able to convey a sense of
soul, transcendence, death and transfiguration.
And that perhaps relaxing and listening
to this music for a brief moment – or a perceived
eternity – can even lift the burden of
time from our shoulders and bring us a step
closer to heavenly realms.
translation: tolingo translation