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  • 0100/0000/perc.small Asian bells/2hp/str
  • Violin
  • 25 min

Programme Note

Composer Note

Lament and Prayer marks the end of a series — the other bookend, so to speak — of a group of works motivated by my reaction to war and suffering, to genocide, especially in terms of the Holocaust, and to what we know has been going on in Bosnia.

Upon completing Lament and Prayer, I intend to put these emotional concerns to rest for a while. Ever since my Symphony No. 2 of 1991, which was partly a response to the Gulf War crisis, I've been writing pieces related to war. In fact, I quote a number of these pieces throughout Lament and Prayer. The dedication in the score reads: "In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II and the Holocaust."

The image I often had in mind while composing Lament and Prayer was that of a cantor and a congregation. The music proceeds as statement and response in much of the first part, which is very chromatic, rather severe-sounding and intense the prayer is mostly quiet, and spun from a very simple, long line with pulsing harmonies underneath — just the hint of the minimalist elements that occasionally crop up in my music. On the surface it is mostly peaceful, and the last part comes to a resolution, closing this chapter of my work. Things on this globe are even more precarious than when I began this series in 1991. I have to detach and leave the world conflicts out of my music for a while.

—Aaron Jay Kernis

Media

Lament and Prayer
Francesco D'Orazio, violin
Francesco D'Orazio, violin

Scores

Features

  • Catalogue Classics: Samuel Barber – Adagio for Strings
    • Catalogue Classics: Samuel Barber – Adagio for Strings
    • Adagio for Strings by Samuel Barber is one of the best-known and most beloved concert works of all time. Derived from the middle movement of his String Quartet, Op. 11, it was premiered in 1938 by Arturo Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra. As the US struggled to emerge from the Great Depression and the prospect of war in Europe loomed, Adagio for Strings provided its audiences with a space to access their emotions, through radio broadcasts and performances across the Americas.

Reviews

LAMENT AND PRAYER has a kind of cantorial mournfulness...Beneath the solos are liquid string harmonies, anguished scurrying and major outbursts suitable to the subject matter...Mr. Kernis plays on our heartstrings with considerable effect...
Bernard Holland , The New York Times
Kernis's LAMENT AND PRAYER is part of a series that Kernis wrote in the 1990's, when he was intent on capturing his responses to war and genocide in his music. Overtly, this concerto-like work is a Holocaust memorial, with a gracefully lachrymose and impassioned solo violin line that draws on the contours of cantorial chant. The orchestral writing reinforces the plaintive qualities of the violin affectingly.
Allan Kozinn, The New York Times

Discography

Title Unavailable
  • Label
    Decca
  • Catalogue Number
    460226
  • Conductor
    David Zinman
  • Ensemble
    Minnesota Orchestra
  • Soloist
    Pamela Frank, violin
Title Unavailable
  • Label
    Decca
  • Catalogue Number
    460226
  • Conductor
    Hugh Wolff
  • Ensemble
    St. Paul Chamber Orchestra
  • Soloist
    Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Sharon Isbin, guitar