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Te Deum
Arvo Part

Do you recall how Michael Moore handled the attack on the World Trade Center in 'Fahrenheit 9/11'?

To the surprise of those who hate him, he did it very, very artfully.

Almost a minute of blank screen, with only sound to tell you what's happening. Sounds of the planes hitting the Towers --- sounds you've never heard before --- and the human counterpoint: people screaming. Then we see papers blowing in a smoke-filled sky, an abstract image of loss. And music: Arvo Part's 'Cantus In Memory Of Benjamin Britten,' a solemn meditation, with bells and solitary voices and silences between notes.

Whoever picked Arvo Part knew what he/she was doing. Because that is holy music --- music that speaks, without intermediaries, to the soul. Which is why, when AIDS first swept across New York City in the 1980s, 'Cantus In Memory Of Benjamin Britten' --- from the 'Tabula Rasa' CD --- is said to have been a great favorite of dying men in the final weeks of their lives. For this music both acknowledges grief and suggests completion. It is, as Part has described it, 'like light going through a prism.'

Who is Arvo Part?

First, a child of Estonia, a tiny country across the Baltic Sea from Finland. It became a satellite of the Soviet Union when Part was young. Eventually he left, settling in West Berlin, where he has lived for decades. He's now 70, with a vast number of compositions and recordings.

But place is not important in accessing Arvo Part --- the key fact about him that he has no real connection to this century. The music tells the story: It is timeless. If you must think of an antecedent, try Bach, for Part and Bach both use religious texts, in Latin. And Part, like Bach, favors a structure that, for all its intricacies, is fundamentally simple --- a prayer to God.

In Part's case, the music is built on what he describes as 'tintinnabulation' --- a bell-like repetition of a single note. The music doesn't move forward. It sits. It just...exists. Indeed, if you listen carefully, it becomes the only thing that exists. As Part says:

The complex and many-faceted only confuses me, and I must search for unity. What is it, this one thing, and how do I find my way to it? Traces of this perfect thing appear in many guises --- and everything that is unimportant falls away. Tintinnabulation is like this. Here I am alone with silence. I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is beautifully played. This one note, or a silent beat, or a moment of silence, comforts me.

This is very evocative, cinematic music --- it's not surprising that, from 1958 to 1967, Part composed music for Estonian film and television. Like the best film scores, his music takes you deeper into the image, makes you look harder and see more. It's expansive, inspiring; as a conductor has noted, it takes a single moment and spreads it out.

Of the many recordings of Part's work available, I prefer the 'Te Deum.' It is majestic, heartfelt, mysterious, profound, moving. But it's very personal music --- it presses emotional buttons --- and so it may feel very different to you. The good news: You will definitely feel something. There is just no way that music of this depth will fail to do something to you --- the only question is how far inside it will take you.

The samples on Amazon will, I suspect, say more about this composer and his music than any description of mine. So do click and find out why I'm raving about Arvo Part.


--- Jesse Kornbluth, for HeadButler.com

To buy ' Tabula Rasa' from Amazon.com, click here .

To buy 'Te Deum' from Amazon.com, click here.

Copyright 2005 by Head Butler Inc.