Tavener: Towards Silence

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JOHN TAVENER
Tavener: Towards Silence
Medici String Quartet / Court Lane Quartet / Finzi Quartet / Cavaleri Quartet

[ Signum / CD ]

Release Date: Monday 7 March 2011

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"This must count as one of Tavener's most powerful and sublime achievements."
(The Sunday Times)

"Tavener continues to produce some of the most distinctive music in our time. His acutely original ear for sonority resonates throughout this extraordinary half-hour vision...I know of no music that takes us quite so near the edge of death."
(The Observer)

"This must count as one of Tavener's most powerful and sublime achievements."
(The Sunday Times)

"You can listen stereo, but Towards Silence really comes into its own on the multichannel SACD layer, where the work's quadraphonic deployment of four string quartets (plus Tibetan temple bowl) is truly immersive...the effect on the listener is anything but formulaic in this palpably committed premiere recording"
(BBC Music)

"It is enormously powerful, by turns lush and spare, with a simultaneous sense of the ritual and the sensual. Tavener has always been a profoundly inspired melodist, and there are joyous moments in this work when that gift comes into play...A glimpse of eternity."
(International Record Review)

As composer of the oratorio The Whale (recorded by the Beatles on the Apple label), the choral Song for Athene (performed at the funeral of Princess Diana), and masterpieces like The Protecting Veil (a cello concerto in all but name), Sir John stands in the top tier of serious contemporary composers and has pop cachet besides.

This première recording of Towards Silence: A Meditation on the Four States of Atma, lasting roughly 35 minutes, written for four string quartets and a large Tibetan bowl, explores the nature of consciousness and the process of dying.

As an invocation, eight speaking voices read passages from the Vedanta, beginning with the command, Awake!, closing with the injunction, Look towards, reach towards, go towards Silence, followed by a brief mantra on the blessing Shanti.

Tavener wrote the work for the Medici Quartet and persuaded leader Paul Robertson to perform it. However, shortly after the manuscript was completed both men became critically ill and close to death themselves.

By August 2008 Robertson had recovered sufficiently to resuscitate the project, which had now taken on a profound significance for himself and for Tavener. The members of the Medici Quartet immediately agreed to reform and identified young professional string quartets with whom to perform and to act as musical mentors. They selected three outstanding British ensembles for the UK performances - the Court Lane, Finzi and Cavaleri Quartets - and rehearsals began. The music is based on mystical Hindu concepts. "I was inspired by reading [French philosopher] Rene

Gueron's book Man and his becoming according to the Vedanta," says Tavener. "He describes the four states: the waking state, the dream state, the condition of deep sleep, and that which is beyond. I decided very rashly early on to base the music on these four states - I couldn't help myself doing so - and try to represent them. These are metaphysical inner states but they also can be described as stages of dying."

Tavener's vision was for all four quartets to be positioned high up in a cathedral dome, invisible to the audience, and arranged in the shape of a cross, bringing the Christian, Buddhist and Hindu religions together.

This sense of space has been captured in the recording, which is an SACD hybrid that can also be enjoyed on a surround sound setup.

"The musical scheme is one of progressive etiolation. The chiming of the bowl marks the passing of time, as the music - thrummed pizzicatos, winding melodies, quietly sustained chords - steadily withdraws into itself, contracting into string chords. Eventually they cease, and all that's left is the sound of the bowl, now a sustained sound rather than chimes, and gradually fading, too. For some in the audience it might have been a great spiritual experience, hard to separate from Tavener's own condition" The Guardian (concert review)