| Composed by Adam Taylor. Fantasia using two chant melodies. Marian, General. Published by CanticaNOVA Publications (C5.6140). Arr : OrganPublisher : CanticaNOVA Publications$4.50 - See more - Buy online Salve Regina is the Marian antiphon sung at the close of Compline [Night Prayer] during Ordinary Time from after Pentecost Sunday until before Advent. There are two common chant settings of this text, a Solemn Tone and a Simple Tone. The Simple Tone is more familiar and is of more recent origin than the mystical Solemn Tone. Adam Taylor uses both tones in his Fantasia on Salve Regina. Like many fantasias, it has numerous short sections in a variety of textural formats: 1. Lentissimo, quasi senza misura - This opening is filled with full chords, echoing the Solemn Tone's introductory fifth, and fast runs which play out the first two phrases: Salve Regina, mater misericordiae: Vita dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. / 2. Andante espressivo - This section begins in 3-part texture, expanding to 4- and 5-part texture. Motifs come from the text: Ad te clamamus, exsules filii Hevae. Ad te suspiramus, gementes et flentes in hac lacrimarum valle. / 3. Poco piu mosso - This portion is for manuals and finds the chant melody in elongated half notes in the soprano. Three other voices move below it in syncopated half notes. The result is a brilliant quarter note motion, but without any quarter notes written. These phrases are used: Eia ergo, Advocata nostra, illos tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte. / 4. Liberamente - A simple solo melody over legato half-note chords quotes the phrase: Et Jesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui, nobis post hoc exsilium ostende. / 5. Tempo primo - This brings a return to the opening texture, now with the melody: O clemens, O pia, O dulcis Virgo Maria. / 6. Moderato, alla toccata - The toccata section begins with sixteenth-note figuration in the manuals and the first half of the Simple Tone in the pedals: from Salve Regina, Mater misericordiae ... through ... in hac lacrimarum valle. / 7. Meno mosso, dolce ma forte - A solo melody in quarter notes sounds over similar three-part texture in the left hand, with the pedal punctuating cadences with a descending fifth: Eia, ergo Advocata nostra ... through ... ad nos converte. The melody switches to the left hand, the accompaniment to the right for Et Jesum ... through ... exsilium ostende. / 8. Alla toccata - The toccata figuration from Section 6 returns, as the pedals play the ending phrases: O clemens, O pia, O dulcis Virgo Maria. The motif, Virgo Maria is repeated in the pedal, above which the manuals conclude with chords as at the opening, alluding to the incipit of the Solemn Tone. // Mr. Taylor's Fantasia is well constructed, moderately difficult, and would make an appropriate selection for any Marian feast day, particularly those falling within Ordinary Time. |
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