Kanon Pokajanen


Kanon Pokajanen is a 1997 composition by Arvo Pärt for four-part choir. The text is the "Canon of Repentance to Our Lord Jesus Christ", an Orthodox hymn. The text is sung in Church Slavonic and following the tradition of Russian sacred choral music, it is sung a cappella.

Background

Arvo Pärt describes his encounter with the text and the history of setting this text to music thus:
He was commissioned by KölnMusic GmbH to write a work commemorating the 750th anniversary of the building of Cologne Cathedral. He finished it in 1997 and it premiered at Cologne Cathedral on March 17, 1998, performed by the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir under the direction of Tõnu Kaljuste, to whom this piece was dedicated.

Structure

As Pärt said, "the words are very important to me, they define the music" and furthermore "the construction of the music is based on the construction of the text." So the structure of the music is going to be based on its text, namely the "Canon of Repentance."
The Eastern Orthodox canon, in general, is composed of nine odes. Each ode begins with an introductory verse called the eirmos which is followed by four verses called troparia all interspersed with antiphonal responses suited for the canon's subject. The last troparion is referred to as the Theotokion, so-called because it is written in honor of the Theotokos.
There are also intermezzo hymns which serve to encapsulate the canon's theme: the Sedalen, the Kontakion and its Ikos, and the Prayer after the Canon. The latter concludes the canon and can serve as pre-Communion prayer.
The eirmos is a paraphrase of one of the nine canticles found in Scripture, usually taking a specific verse or the general idea in the Biblical song. Here are the list of the Biblical canticles with their traditional names:
  1. Exodus —The Canticle of Moses and Miriam, after crossing the Red Sea
  2. Deuteronomy —The Canticle of Moses, chastising the Israelites for their sins
  3. 1 Samuel —The Canticle of Hannah
  4. Book of Habakkuk —The Canticle of Habakkuk
  5. Book of Isaiah —The Prayer of Isaiah
  6. Book of Jonah —The Prayer of Jonah
  7. Prayer of Azariah 2–21 —The Prayer of the Three Holy Children: Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah
  8. The Song of the Three Holy Children 28–67 —The Song of the Three Holy Children
  9. Gospel of Luke —The Magnificat
Normally the second ode is omitted owing to its severe nature. The most notable exception to this is in the Great Penitential Canon of St. Andrew of Crete which is chanted during Great Lent. In most canons, including the present one, there is no text written for Ode II and therefore there is not an Ode II in Kanon Pokajanen. The numbering, however, does not change as shown in the outline below for the entire piece:
Kanon Pokajanen exhibits characteristics of Pärt's tinntinabular style. The piece remains almost exclusively in D minor, deviating only in particularly expressive passages and sometimes final cadences.
Overall, the melodies and harmonies remain fairly static throughout the piece. Variation is created through alteration of the dispositions and roles of the various voice parts. The odes build toward each intermezzo section, treating it as a small climax. The Prayer after the Canon is the most intense of all the climaxes, paralleling the prayer's function.

Endnotes

  1. – Arvo Pärt, "Kanon pokajanen", trans. Catherine Schelbert in accompanying booklet, Kanon Pokajanen performed by the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, conducted by Tõnu Kaljuste. ECM New Series 1654/55, 1998. Compact disc.
  2. – Ibid., "Starting from Scratch", interviewed by Nick Kimberly, Gramophone 74, 16.
  3. Johann von Gardner, Russian Church Singing, Volume 1 , trans. Vladimir Morosan, 44.