Critical Acclaim for the CD "Sweet Irrational
Worship"
“Chad Runyon shapes each song as if it were a miniature tale being freshly recounted....
Runyon's attention to the melding of words and music is sure. He teams seamlessly with pianist
Jacqueline Chew, who points out nuances in Niles's writing with fine control and vibrancy.”
--Gramophone Awards Issue, 2006
“An unusual CD, recording the results of an unlikely collaboration, results that are full of
honesty and conviction.... Its unpretentious music communicates the composer’s obvious love of the texts he sets
and a similar affection is evident in its performance.”
--MusicWeb International, October 2006
“As sung here by Chanticleer alumnus Chad Runyon, the songs are imbued with the kind of meditative grace
that one would expect and hope to hear; pianist Jacqueline Chew provides limpid and sensitive accompaniment. Very highly recommended.”
--CD Hotlist, new releases for libraries, August 2006
“These songs demand drama and understanding to interpret. Both
have succeeded remarkably … [in this] very nuanced and lovely reading
of the music.”
--Ron Pen, Director, John Jacob Niles Center for American Music
“[They bring] so much love to the music [and] have a wonderful
feeling for
the work. [An] outstanding CD of the Niles Merton Songs.”
--Jacqueline Roberts, soprano for whom the songs were written, Lexington,
KY
Chad Runyon and Jacqueline Chew’s CD “Sweet Irrational Worship: The Niles-Merton Songs, Opus 171 and 172”,
an MSR Classics release, is available now. Famed Trappist monk and
poet, Thomas Merton (1915-1968), and folk song composer and balladeer,
John
Jacob Niles (1892-1980), unite to create some of the most provocative
and thoughtful art songs of the 20th century.
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Above is a sampling of select songs from Sweet Irrational
Worship.
Click the PayPal link to purchase this CD now.
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The song cycle was presented at the International Thomas Merton Society (ITMS)
convention in San Diego in June, 2005. The recording was made in studio at Skywalker Sound on August 10, 11 2005.
In the late summer of 1967, two eminent Kentucky
residents met for the first time. Thomas Merton (1915-1968),
a Trappist monk and author, traveled around the world to settle in
the Abby of Gethsemani. John Jacob Niles (1892-1980),
a folk singer and composer, never drifted far from his Kentucky roots. The
journey to their meeting found its genesis in the language of existentialist
poetry and Zen Buddhism. The
two would only meet a few times before Merton’s untimely death
in Thailand on December 10, 1968. But
this was enough to launch Niles on a four-year journey to set twenty-two
poems of Thomas Merton to music.
Both Opus 171 and 172 are unique because, as song
cycles, they do not share common harmonic or melodic themes. Rather,
it is Merton’s poetry that binds each cycle together. Opus
171 reflects both the poet and composer’s fascination with
nature and change. Images of wheat fields making “simple music,” the moon speaking “clearly
to the hill” and “secret vegetal
words” permeate the first ten songs. Niles sought to capture
this with music. For example, in “The Messenger” he uses
a descending melody of triplets to create an image
of sunlight spilling forth as the singer announces the “coming
of the warrior sun.” In “Evening”a repeated
three-note melody throughout the piece evokes the call of the whippoorwill.
Niles was devastated by Merton’s death. Undoubtedly
his grief influenced the
poems he selected for Opus 172. These remaining twelve songs center
upon grief, violence and human misery. “For My Brother:
Reported Missing in Action, 1943” is Thomas Merton’s most
famous poem and Niles perfectly captures the overwhelming
anguish Merton felt at the loss of his only brother. A falling melodic
line at the
beginning of
the piece suggests a sense of despair. Then, as the poet entreats his
brother to “Come, in my labor find a
resting place” Niles changes the key from minor to major and marks
the passage “with great tenderness.” A
funeral march closes the piece as the pianist plays alternate fifths
and octaves to create the effect of marching.
In “The Ohio River – Louisville,” Niles employs a technique
he learned from Charles Ives. The pianist is
instructed to play a “cluster chord” only on the black notes
using a felt-covered board 10 7/8” long. The clashing
sound of the chord represents the noise of the city. He contrasts
this clashing sound with a sparse accompaniment to reflect the “tremendous silence” of the
slow-moving river that drowns out all industry and commerce.
On October 27, 1967, Merton heard Jacqueline Roberts
perform “The
Messenger” and “The Nativity” at Boot
Hill Farm, Niles’s home. His response to the music was
immediate and enthusiastic. Niles continued to work with
Ms. Roberts and Janelle Pope, her pianist, over the next eight
months to complete the remaining
songs in Opus 171. In 1968, Merton visited Boot Hill Farm one final time.
During his visit, Merton heard the first ten songs and Niles shared with
him the poems he was interested in for the second set
of songs. Merton encouraged Niles to make any needed adjustments to the
text to fit the music. Niles worked over the next two years to
complete the final twelve songs of Opus 172. Roberts continued to
perform songs from both cycles, culminating in a performance of all
twenty-two songs in 1975 at the
University of Kentucky Newman Center. Roberts’s pianists, Pope,
and later, Nancie Field were instrumental in editing the
manuscripts that were published in 1981.
John Jacob Niles began composing music at a very
early age. In fact, he
wrote one of his most famous works “Go ’way from My
Window” at the age of 16. Niles
sought to capture the American spirit with his Appalachian
ballads. He had a remarkable career as balladeer and singer, and
at the venerable age of 75, he was seeking a new way to express himself
in his music. It was around this time Victor and Carolyn Hammer
introduced
him to Merton’s poetry. Victor had become friends with
both men and had painted their portraits. Niles discovered
Merton’s poems at a time when he had suffered
a tremendous loss. During his 75th birthday
concert at University of Kentucky, a thief broke into his home and stole
all of his unpublished works. The
manuscripts were never recovered. Niles said this occurrence “marked
the end of something and the beginning
of a new concept of music.” Once Niles began reading Merton’s
poems, he knew that he must set his words to music. John
Jacob Niles was active in the performances of these songs until
his death in 1980. The Niles-Merton song cycle is his last published
work. Though their relationship was brief, John Jacob Niles was deeply
affected by the man and
poet Thomas
Merton. Whenever the pieces were performed, Niles preferred the audience
have the text of the poems in their
program notes. He felt the audience should listen in a reflective state.
In his introduction to the pieces at
Agnes Scott College, in 1971, he articulated his own journey with Merton’s
poetry. I do not expect you to understand the philosophy and the meaning
behind these
words at first glance… It took me
some time. It wasn’t until it was well set to music that the meaning
of the thing began to percolate in me. And it
showed me something about how important it is that poetry should be set
to music if you ever expect to understand it completely.
– liner notes by JODY BLACK
CD Tracks:
The Niles – Merton Songs
John Jacob Niles (1892-1980)/Thomas Merton (1915-1968)
OPUS 171
1 The Messenger 3:47
2 The Nativity (Carol) 3:11
3 A Responsory, 1948 3:27
4 Sundown 1:40
5 When You Point Your Finger 3:34
6 The Weathercock on the Cathedral of Quito 2:27
7 Evening 2:36
8 Prayer (Great Prayer) 1:15
9 Love Winter When the Plant Says Nothing 1:31
10 Lament of a Maiden for the Warrior’s Death 1:23
OPUS 172
1l O Sweet Irrational Worship 2:01
12 Autumn 1:32
13 Wisdom 1:19
14 The Mirror’s Mission 2:14
15 For My Brother: Reported Missing in Action, 1943 5:06
16 The Greek Women 2:56
17 Cana 2:36
18 The Ohio River – Louisville 3:35
19 Original Sin (A Memorial Anthem for Father’s Day) 2:28
20 Birdcage Walk 5:01
21 Jesus Weeps Into the Fire 2:25
22 Mosaic: St. Praxed’s 2:16
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