Music Notes for Sunday, May 18, 2025

Music for Fifth Sunday of Easter

Ubi caritas – Maurice Duruflé (1902-1986)

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For Maurice Duruflé (1902-1986) composition was a slow, laborious process involving constant revision and impeccable craftsmanship. After sixty years only ten works had been published—one fewer than his teacher Paul Dukas, a similarly fastidious perfectionist. Unlike his friend and fellow student Olivier Messiaen, Duruflé eschewed the avant-garde experimentation that might have resulted in a fashionable new language, choosing instead a retrospective stance, looking to plainsong for his inspiration, and great French composers—Debussy, Ravel, Fauré and Dukas—for his models.

In 1960 Duruflé wrote four short motets which he dedicated to Auguste Le Guennant, the director of the Gregorian Institute in Paris. All four of them are based on melodies from the Benedictine monastery of Solesmes, which issued the official, most widely recognized edition of Gregorian chant. This Sunday’s communion motet in church, Ubi caritas, is one of these four. Its text and foundational melody are an antiphon taken from the Mass for Maundy Thursday. It is fitting that it is sung this Sunday, when the Gospel reading is the same passage from St John that was read on Maundy Thursday, an exhortation to Christian love.

Duruflé’s setting begins and ends with only the darker choral sound of the altos, tenors and basses. Each phrase of the text is repeated and the altos alternate singing them in two separate choirs. The tenors are subdivided into two voice parts in order to maintain four-part chordal harmony. After the sopranos enter for the exultant central section, the harmonic structure increases to five parts.

Where charity and love are, God is there.
Christ’s love has gathered us into one.
Let us rejoice and be pleased in Him.
Let us fear, and let us love the living God.
And may we love each other with a sincere heart.

Gerald Harder