Karl Jenkins – The Peacemakers (2011)

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Karl Jenkins – The Peacemakers (2011)

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Part I
01. Blessed are the peacemakers
02. Fanfara
03. Peace, peace!
04. I offer you peace
05. Inner peace
06. Healing Light: a Celtic prayer
07. Meditation: Peace is...
08. Evening Prayer
Intermezzo
09. Solitude

Part II
10. Fiat pax in virtute tua
11. He had a dream: Elegy for Martin Luther King
12. The Dove
13. The Peace Prayer of St Francis of Assisi
14. One Song
15. Let there be justice for all
16. Dona nobis pacem
17. Anthem: Peace, triumphant peace

Lucy Crowe, soprano
Chloe Hanslip, violin
Ashwin Shrinivasan, bansuri
Gareth Davies, flutes
Davy Spillane, uilleann pipes
Nigel Hitchcock, soprano saxophone
Laurence Cottle, fretless bass guitar
Clive Bell, shakuhachi
Jody K. Jenkins, ethnic percussion
Rundfunkchor Berlin
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Youth Chorus
The Really Big Chorus
London Symphony Orchestra
Karl Jenkins - conductor

 

‘The Peacemakers is dedicated to the memory of all those who lost their lives during armed conflict: in particular, innocent civilians. When I composed The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace for the millennium, it was with the hope of looking forward to a century of peace. Sadly, nothing much has changed.’ ---Karl Jenkins CBE

 

The Peacemakers is a work extolling peace. One line, from Rumi (the 13th-century Persian mystic poet whose words I have set) sums up the ethos of the piece: ‘All religions, all singing one song: Peace be with you’. Many of the ‘contributors’ are iconic figures that have shaped history, others are less well known. I have occasionally placed some text in a musical environment that helps identify their origin or culture; the bansuri (Indian flute) and tabla in the Gandhi, the shakuhachi (a Japanese flute associated with Zen Buddhism) and temple bells in that of the Dalai Lama, African percussion in the Mandela and echoes of the blues of the deep American South (as well as a quote from Schumann’s Träumerei (Dreaming) in my tribute to Martin Luther King. ‘Healing Light: a Celtic prayer’ is just that, with uilleann pipes and bodhrán drums. I have also presented some odd combinations, such as ‘monastic chant meets the ethnic’ in ‘Let there be justice for all’ and ‘Inner peace’.

Having decided on The Peacemakers as the textual core and title of my new work the search was on to find messengers of peace. A handful of obvious figures came to mind, figures that have changed the world, such as Gandhi, Mandela and Martin Luther King, followed by such iconic and inspiring people as Mother Teresa and Anne Frank. Having sourced suitable and pithy text from these the net was cast to find other ‘peacemakers’. I had been aware of Albert Schweitzer as a boy, in part because my organist father had recordings of him playing Bach, and I had previously set the Persian mystic poet, Rumi, in my Stabat Mater. I felt I needed something from the Abrahamic religions, so there are words from Christ, the Qur’an, Judaism and St Seraphim of Sarov (a Russian Orthodox monk), while St Francis of Assisi is included by association. I also quote from the Old Testament Book of Isaiah in my homage to Martin Luther King, as he did in his ‘I have a dream’ speech. English poets, Shelley and Malory are heard, as is Bahá’u’lláh, the founder of the Bahá’í faith. Carol Barratt added further text with the odd sentence from me. Some anonymous traditional text has also been included. I feel privileged that Terry Waite CBE has contributed some wonderful words, especially written for The Peacemakers. ---Karl Jenkins, September 2011, boosey.com

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Last Updated (Thursday, 16 January 2014 10:04)