ABSTRACT

The flourishing of religious or spiritually-inspired music in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries remains largely unexplored. The engagement and tensions between modernism and tradition, and institutionalized religion and spirituality are inherent issues for many composers who have sought to invoke spirituality and Otherness through contemporary music.

Contemporary Music and Spirituality provides a detailed exploration of the recent and current state of contemporary spiritual music in its religious, musical, cultural and conceptual-philosophical aspects. At the heart of the book are issues that consider the role of secularization, the claims of modernity concerning the status of art, and subjective responses such as faith and experience.

The contributors provide a new critical lens through which it is possible to see the music and thought of Cage, Ligeti, Messiaen, Stockhausen as spiritual music. The book surrounds these composers with studies of and by other composers directly associated with the idea of spiritual music (Harvey, Gubaidulina, MacMillan, Pärt, Pott, and Tavener), and others (Adams, Birtwistle, Ton de Leeuw, Ferneyhough, Ustvolskaya, and Vivier) who have created original engagements with the idea of spirituality.

Contemporary Music and Spirituality is essential reading for humanities scholars and students working in the areas of musicology, music theory, theology, religious studies, philosophy of culture, and the history of twentieth-century culture.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

What is a contemporary spiritual music?

part I|93 pages

Passions

chapter 1|20 pages

For whom the bells toll

Arvo Pärt's Passio, metamodernism and the appealing promise of tintinnabulation

chapter 2|17 pages

Sacrificial passions

The influence of Wagner and Scruton in James MacMillan's The Sacrifice and St John Passion

chapter 4|28 pages

Synoptic passions

Gubaidulina's St John Passion in the post-Jungian era

part II|117 pages

Composer studies

chapter 6|17 pages

Music and belief

The figure of singularity in Galina Ustvolskaya's work 1

chapter 7|21 pages

‘Zen' in the art of Tōru Takemitsu

Listening as vehicle for inner discovery

chapter 8|17 pages

John Cage's journey into silence

chapter 9|19 pages

Stockhausen's spirituality

chapter 10|23 pages

Claude Vivier at the end 1

part III|99 pages

Perspectives and ‘prospectives'

chapter 11|29 pages

Searching for the elusive obvious

Memory, forgiveness, catharsis, and transcendence in contemporary spiritual music

chapter 12|17 pages

The curvatures of salvation

Messiaen, Stockhausen, and Adams

chapter 13|14 pages

In defence of complexity

The new spiritual music's farewell to modernism

chapter 14|22 pages

An awkward reverence

Composing oneself in the twenty-first-century Anglican church

chapter 15|16 pages

Spiritual music

‘Positive' negative theology?