Dolour and death; the Way of the Cross, unadorned: Franz Liszt – Via Crucis

by 5:4

As i’ve said before, my love of the chorale began in my teenage years with Bach. This love grew after hearing Franz Liszt‘s Holy Week cycle, Via Crucis, some years later. Not that chorales are a principal feature of the work; on the contrary, Liszt’s exploration of the Stations of the Cross is primarily a series of organ meditations, occasionally elaborated upon by choir and soloists. To that end, the work is very simple, austere and restrained, almost to the point of seeming – paradoxically – eccentric. Favouring a contemplative approach over a dramatic one, Liszt’s material is at times so bare, so rudely unadorned, that it can seem strange and disorienting, in the same way that churches and cathedrals up and down the land become shocking when, as now, their decorations and ornaments are shrouded in purple cloth.

In fact, Liszt takes to the extreme the division of which i spoke yesterday, of emotional detachment, aloof and austere, and emotional engagement, involved and moved. With so much of the music being of the former kind, the appearance of the chorales is all the more striking, seeming to blaze in technicolor against pervading shades of grey. Liszt uses just two chorales, “O Haupt, voll Blut und Wunden” and “O Traurigkeit, O Herzeleid”, both of which (the latter especially) he treats to gorgeous harmonisations. But much of the music follows, literally, the difficult, faltering steps of Christ’s journey; the organ plods, staggers, collapses, laborious and wearied. On a few exquisite occasions, serenity briefly transcends the gloom, like shafts of sunlight puncturing black cloud: as Jesus meets his mother, as Simon of Cyrene assists carrying the cross, as Jesus dies upon it, and as he is taken down from it and buried. While unashamedly ascetic, this is nonetheless a profoundly moving examination of the dolour and death to which the Via Crucis leads.

The only recording i’ve heard is on a CD given away free with BBC Music Magazine way back in 1993, magnificently – and extremely sensitively – performed by the Taverner Consort and Choir, under the direction of Andrew Parrott, with Wayne Marshall at the organ.


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5:4

Hi Ian, thanks for your comment. i'm glad you like the Liszt, it's a very special piece, & therefore surprising that more people haven't come across it.

best wishes! s.

Ian Edward Detlefsen

This is a brilliant and beautiful thing. It's so hard to find good classical music, especially if you're a mere college student. You are an oasis for me. Thank you from the depths of this soul.

FD Leone

If you like this work (I am a huge fan of it), of all the recordings I’ve heard, I like those by Reinbert de Leeuw. He has recorded it three times, the earliest was with the Netherlands Chamber Choir, then he did a piano solo version (no choir). His most recent recording is wonderful. Collegium Vocale Gent with piano.

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