Mass (Jongen) Explained

Mass
Composer:Joseph Jongen
Image Upright:1.2
Full Title:French: Messe en l'honeur du Saint-Sacrement
Translation:Mass in honour of the Blessed Sacrament
Opus:130
Text:Mass ordinary
Language:Latin
Dedication:Alphonse Jongen
Occasion:700 years of the feast Corpus Christi
Composed: / 1949 (Credo)
Movements:six

The Mass, Op. 130, is a setting of the Latin Mass ordinary by Joseph Jongen for choir, brass band and organ. Jongen composed it in 1945 in memory of his brother Alphonse. The full title is French: Messe en l'honeur du Saint-Sacrement. Five movements were first performed in 1946 at the Liège Cathedral. The work was published by Oxford University Press in 1990.

History

The Belgian composer Joseph Jongen is known mostly for instrumental and chamber music. He has written around 60 art songs and secular choral works, but little sacred music. After he retired as the director of the Brussels Conservatoire in 1939 however, his interest in choral compositions for the church was raised by Georges Alexis, who had studied with him at the Liège Conservatoire. Alexis possibly initiated the writing of a mass to celebrate the 700th anniversary of the feast Latin: [[Corpus Christi (feast)|Corpus Christi]] in Liège.

During world War II, Jongen could not compose anything from August 1944, due to the depressing circumstances of his life at the time. His brother Alphonse who had been a canon at the Liège Cathedral and to whom he had been close, died after surgery. His son Jacques was arrested by the Gestapo. Jacques was freed again in March 1945, and Jongen wrote later: "It was then that I began to write the Mass."

Jongen completed the Mass at Sart-lez-Spa between 9 July and 16 August 1945 and dedicated it to the memory of his brother Alphonse. Jongen first wrote a missa brevis, omitting the Latin: [[Credo]] from the mass ordinary. The full title is French: Messe en l'honeur du Saint-Sacrement, marking it as a mass in honour of the Blessed Sacrament.

The Mass was first performed on Corpus Christi, 23 June 1946, during a pontifical mass at the Cathédrale Saint-Paul de Liège, conducted by the composer. The work is also known as Messe de la Fête-Dieu, after the feast day.

Jongen completed it to a setting of the full mass by adding the Credo in 1949. It was published by Oxford University Press in 1990.

Structure, scoring and music

The mass is structured in six movements. All four voices SATB are at times divided, mostly in homophony. The voices are marked "solo" at the beginning of the Benedictus. The brass ensemble consists of two trumpets, four horns, three trombones and tuba.

In the following table of the movements, the markings and time signatures are taken from the vocal score.

IncipitVoicesMarkingKeyTime
Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: [[Kyrie]] SATB French: Modéré G minor
Latin: [[Gloria in Excelsis Deo|Gloria]] SATTBB Italian: Allegro (ma moderato) D major 3/4
Latin: [[Credo]] SATB Italian: Allegro moderato D major 2/2
Latin: [[Sanctus]] S A T B SATB Italian: Maestoso (Fanfare) D major
Latin: [[Sanctus Benedictus|Benedictus]] SATB Italian: Andantino (non troppo mosso) G major 12/8
Latin: [[Agnus Dei (music)|Agnus dei]] SATB Italian: Grave E minor

Alexis inspired several musical features of the Mass, such including elements from Gregorian chant, the inclusion of brass instruments after the model of Giovanni Gabrieli, and writing more counterpoint than before, such as fugato for "Pleni sunt caeli" of the Sanctus, and counterpoint in the voices in the "Cum Sancto Spiritu" of the Gloria and the "Et resurrexit" of the Credo. Links between movements are subtle, "often texturally rather than thematically related".

Performance and recording

The first performance of the Mass in Germany was performed by the Reger-Chor, conducted by Gabriel Dessauer, in 1988 before it was printed, at the Stiftskirche of Aschaffenburg, repeated in St. Bonifatius, Wiesbaden.

The Mass was recorded in 1994 by the Brussels Choral Society and the Luc Capouillez Brass Ensemble, conducted by Tom Cunningham. It was recorded again in 2007 by St. John's College Choir, Cambridge, the London City Brass and organist Paul Provost, conducted by David Hill.

External links