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Manookian's kinder, gentler Requiem

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  • Manookian's kinder, gentler Requiem

    Salt Lake Tribune, UT
    April 25 2004

    Manookian's kinder, gentler Requiem

    Composer Jeff Manookian rehearses with soloists Julie Wright-Costa,
    left, and Aubrey Adams McMillan. (Paul Fraughton/The Salt Lake
    Tribune)

    By Catherine Reese Newton
    The Salt Lake Tribune

    No fire and brimstone for Jeff Manookian, thanks. His new
    Requiem, which the Oratorio Society of Utah will premiere tonight as
    part of the Madeleine Festival, focuses on a compassionate God and
    the promise of resurrection.
    "In going through the [Requiem] literature, I was taken aback by
    all the references to hellfire and brimstone and God as this awful,
    vengeful creature," Manookian said. So rather than write a thundering
    composition in the tradition of Verdi or Berlioz, he set only the
    more peaceful and joyous movements of the traditional Mass for the
    dead.
    The gentler approach puts the Salt Lake composer in good company,
    said tonight's soprano soloist, Julie Wright-Costa. Faure, Durufle
    and Brahms also eschewed the darker movements. "The Brahms has a
    message specifically for the living," Wright-Costa said. Likewise,
    "[Manookian] wanted a more compassionate and benevolent spirit -- a
    loving image of Christ and God, rather than wrath, rage and
    judgment," she said.
    Manookian considered setting poetry of Walt Whitman rather than
    the traditional liturgical text, but decided "if I kept strictly to
    the Latin, the focus would be on the music," he said. "I didn't want
    the audience to be tethered to the text."
    The movements he used are "Requiem Aeternum (eternal rest)," for
    choir, soprano and alto; "Offertorium," a soprano solo; "Tuba Mirum
    (the trumpet shall sound)," for choir alone; "Pie Jesu (blessed
    Jesus)," duet for soprano and alto; "Te Deum (we praise thee)," choir
    alone; "Lux Aeternum (eternal light)," alto solo; and "In Paradisum
    (in paradise)," choir and soloists.
    The symmetrical structure "just happened," Manookian said, adding
    his music tends to write itself: "When I have to force something,
    that's when I rip it up, until it flows naturally." He wrote the
    Requiem in 44 days. "I was living like Howard Hughes, going for days
    on end in my bathrobe and letting my beard grow," he said. "The piece
    came very fast; it surprised even me. -- It's amazing what you can do
    on a deadline."

    Manookian's last venture with the Oratorio Society was in 2000
    with "Symphony of Tears," commemorating the Armenian genocide of
    1915.
    "This one is more upbeat," said Oratorio Society president
    Richard Grossen, who sings tenor in the chorus and also performed in
    "Symphony of Tears." The earlier work "had to grow on you more."
    Manookian agreed that the Requiem is more readily accessible, the
    aural equivalent of "sinking into the most comfortable, warm
    bathtub." He added that he intended the Requiem, unlike the more
    programmatic "Symphony of Tears," to be "generic in the best sense --
    [so] every person can identify with it on his or her own terms. It's
    a much more universal piece." The music is in a "blatantly
    post-Romantic style."
    Manookian said he wrote the Requiem "during the period of a broken
    heart, a down period in my life. -- It represents the end or death of
    a major section of my life."
    Also on the program are Manookian's 1991 composition "Endless Are
    the Clouds" and the 2002 work "Khachkar" for alto flute, harp and
    strings. Manookian explained that "Khachkar" is Armenian for
    "Christ's cross." The 10-minute piece, based on two Armenian folk
    songs, is "an orchestral prayer, an invocation to the Requiem."

    Manookian at the Madeleine

    * The Oratorio Society of Utah, with the Intermountain Chamber
    Orchestra, flutist Laurel Ann Maurer, soprano Julie Wright-Costa and
    alto Aubrey Adams McMillan, will perform the Requiem and other works
    of Jeff Manookian tonight at 8 in the Cathedral of the Madeleine, 331
    E. South Temple, Salt Lake City. The composer will conduct.

    * Admission is free.
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