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Et Lux
2015 studio album by Wolfgang Rihm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Et Lux is a classical and choral album by German composer Wolfgang Rihm recorded in February 2014 by the Huelgas Ensemble with the Minguet Quartett, conducted by Paul Van Nevel, and released on the ECM New Series March the following year.[2]
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Composition
Like Rihm's participation in the Requiem of Reconciliation, the album is a reworking of the Roman Catholic mass for the dead.
In Et Lux he uses a few specific text fragments from the mass, for example “et lux perpetua luceat” (and let perpetual light shine upon them) used to pray for eternal light for the deceased, which appear as components of a progressively realized whole.
On the album, the conductor, Paul Van Nevel, doubled the vocal part.[2]
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Reception
In The Guardian, Kate Molleson gave the album four stars and says that "this music treads the line of tangibility, with sudden rushes of anger or fondness and the messy half-memories that come with grief.... Conductor Paul van Nevel doubles the vocal parts to create broad, generous textures that sound lovely and lush against the strings' icy clarity—all qualities that ECM's engineers are expert at capturing."[1]
In Gramophone, Arnold Whittall says that "while some of the more austere episodes might strain the listener's concentration, they are set against eruptive, even melodramatic passages that demonstrate Rihm's special ability to make something distinctively edgy out of meditation and reflection."[3]
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Track listing
All tracks are written by Wolfgang Rihm.
Personnel
- Paul Van Nevel – conductor
- Huelgas Ensemble
- Minguet Quartett
- Ulrich Isfort – violin
- Annette Reisinger – violin
- Aroa Sorin – viola
- Matthias Diener – violoncello
References
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