This collection of short works by
Arvo Pärt features a cappella music and some lightly accompanied by an organ. Conducting the
Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir is
Paul Hillier, one of
Pärt's most celebrated interpreters and the author of a book-length study of his music.
Hillier came to
Pärt from the field of early music, and in his notes he stresses affinities between
Pärt and the composers of medieval and Renaissance eras.
Pärt rarely uses music to directly illustrate the text, for example. Instead, just as a composer of five centuries ago might do, he selects a pitch environment and elaborates it through the placement and manipulation of sonorities.
Hillier points out
Pärt's liking for chains of first-inversion chords and for the so-called Landini cadence, linking those to music of the fourteenth century, especially in England. The comparison to pre-Renaissance English music is a good one more generally as well:
Pärt can be very quiet, and his music does bring to mind, as
Hillier said of the opening Da pacem Domine, stones placed with exquisite care in a Zen garden. But he also has a grand manner that can't be described as minimal; even in small-scale pieces like these there are moments where he brings forces together to heighten the music's intensity. The effect is like that of music by Leonel Power and the other composers of the Old Hall manuscript: stark, but also big at times.
All this goes to show that
Hillier, always a strong interpreter of
Pärt's music, is superb here. The sound he obtains from the
Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir is both beautiful and impersonal; he focuses not on the tonal conservatism of
Pärt's music but on its structures and details. There is little sweetness, but there is an uncanny feel for the way the music slowly unfolds. Hear the composer's setting of Psalm 131 (track 4), the second of the Two Slavic Psalms, as it begins with subtle establishment of relationships among tones of a simple pentachord and builds a long ascent in intensity out of them. Other conductors may get a slightly more virtuosic interpretation of
Pärt's tintinnabulation (bell-effect) technique out of their choirs, but none will have a better feel for where it fits in to the overall structure of a work. This is an excellent choice for anyone contemplating a first
Pärt purchase as well as for those who have been following his career and its highly successful promotion on
Hillier's part.