• Matthew Aucoin
  • Revelations of Divine Love (for Baritone and Piano Quintet) (2020)

  • Associated Music Publishers Inc (World)

This arrangement was commissioned by Orchestra of St. Luke’s, with the generous support of Larry Ruttman and Eric Schmider

Commissioner exclusivity applies

arr. by the composer 2024
Unavailable for performance.

  • Bar + pf/2vn.va.vc
  • Baritone
  • 9 min
  • medieval anchoress, Julian of Norwich
  • English
    • 4th December 2024, DiMenna Center for Classical Music, New York, NY, United States of America
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Programme Note

Composer note
The medieval mystic Julian of Norwich’s Revelations of Divine Love is one of the strangest and most searingly potent visionary texts ever written. When she was thirty years old, Julian fell gravely ill and believed her death was imminent. As she lay sick, she had a series of visions (“shewings”) of Jesus, which she described in writing after her unexpected recovery.

I’m drawn to texts that tell of experiences that are right on the border between the religious and the erotic: I’ve explored this ambiguity in pieces like This Earth, which sets a tantalizing passage from Dante’s Purgatorio.

Julian’s Revelations goes to both extremes: it is intensely spiritual (Julian lived much of her life as an anchoress, confined to a small cell within a church so that she could devote herself entirely to worship) and also intensely physical. Her visions are sometimes gruesome: she witnesses blood trickling from Jesus’s wounds, and the decay of her Savior’s body. Her longing for Jesus and identification with him (“I would that His pains were my pains…I desired to suffer with Him”) is so intense that any theoretical boundary between the religious and the erotic is surely obliterated.

My musical setting takes a section from early in the Revelations, the section that recounts Julian’s illness, her belief that she is sure to die, and then her mysterious recovery. I happened to be exactly Julian’s age (“thirty years old and a half”) when I wrote the piece, and her account of her sickness felt disturbingly relevant, given that it was written during some of the bleakest months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

I wrote this piece for my friends Theo Hoffman and Adam Nielsen, with the generous support of the New York Festival of Song.

— Matthew Aucoin

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