The Armed Man
- A Mass For Peace
"The Armed Man must be feared;
Everywhere it has been decreed
That everyman should arm himself
With an Iron coat of mail"
Anon, c1450-1463
"The Armed Man - A Mass For Peace"
is the result of a special millennial commission from the Royal
Armouries and the latest in a six century old tradition of "Armed
Man" masses that take the fifteenth century French song "L'Homme
Armé" as their starting point.
According to Guy Wilson, Master of the Royal
Armouries "The theme that 'the armed man must be feared'
which is the message of the song seemed to me painfully relevant
to the 20th century and so the idea was born to commission a modern
'Armed Man Mass'. What better way both to look back and reflect
as we leave behind the most war-torn and destructive century in
human history, and to look ahead with hope and commit ourselves
to a new and more peaceful millennium."
Large scale in both scope and scale "The
Armed Man" it is a profoundly moving yet very accessible
work which uses the most traditional of means to explore an all
too contemporary subject. As Karl explains, "As I started
composing "The Armed Man" the tragedy of Kosovo unfolded.
I was reminded daily of the horror of such conflict and so I dedicate
the work to the victims of Kosovo" .
In a manner reminiscent of Britten's War Requiem,
"The Armed Man" interpolates a number of different texts
within the usual Mass form. Malory, Dryden, Swift, Tennyson, Kipling,
The Koran and the Hindu Mahàbharàta contribute to
a compelling account of the descent into and terrible consequences
of war.
Karl was very moved and much inspired by Guy
Wilson's selection of texts and in his music for "The Armed
Man" has drawn on a similarly diverse array of cultural and
historical sources. It's difficult to think of another composer
who could successfully place a muezzin's call to prayer within
a Mass setting and follow it with a Kyrie that quotes both Palestrina
and Brazilian drum rhythms. That Karl does so with such ease and
to such powerful effect is a tribute to his remarkable skill and
musical sensitivity.
The CD features Karl Jenkins conducting The London
Philharmonic Orchestra and The National Youth Choir of Great Britain
alongside soloists Tristan Hambleton (Boy Treble), Mohammed Gad
(Muezzin) and Young Musician Of The Year, Guy Johnston (Cello).
"The Armed Man - A Mass For Peace"
received its world première in April 2000 at London's Royal
Albert Hall. In a rapturous performance, by turns visceral and
ethereal, the Mass was "a firebomb of orchestral and human
voices" (The Times) that drew "prolonged shouts of approval
from the audience" (The Independent).
"Ring out the thousand wars of old
Ring in the thousand years of peace"
Alfred Lord Tennyson
1850 |