1
Peace upon you, Jerusalem I rejoiced that they said to me[5’09]
2
Morning star Christ is the morning star[2’41]
3
The woman with the alabaster box Now when Jesus was in Bethany[5’43]
4
The deer’s cry Christ with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me[4’00]
5
Virgencita[5’46]
6
Solfeggio do re mi fa so la si …[5’58]
7
Zwei Beter Jesus sprach zu einigen[5’10]
Rachel Ambrose Evans (soprano)
8
Tribute to Caesar Then went the Pharisees[6’16]
Richard Bannan (bass)
9
Summa Credo in unum Deum[5’10]
10
Memento Pomiluy mya, Bozhe, pomiluy mya (Ode VII from Kanon Pokajanen)[7’17]
11
Alleluia-Tropus[3’20]
12
Da pacem, Domine[5’41]
Stephen Layton and Polyphony have a long and fruitful relationship with the music of Arvo Pärt. Their recording of Triodion and other choral works (CDA67375) won a Gramophone Award and became a cult classic. The extraordinary purity of Polyphony’s singing is the perfect vehicle for music of such clean, elemental simplicity, such cathartic calm.
This third Pärt album from Stephen Layton and Polyphony reaches right back, intriguingly, to the composer’s youthful modernist phase and spans nearly five decades—from 1963 to 2012—in the process. As with the album Triodion, it reflects an increasingly broad spread of languages and sources in Pärt’s chosen texts. Latin, German and English are joined here by Church Slavonic and Spanish. A range of biblical texts are set alongside ancient prayers.