Search - Richard Holmes, Seymour Barab, Richard Auldon Clark :: Barab: Cosmos Cantata

Barab: Cosmos Cantata
Richard Holmes, Seymour Barab, Richard Auldon Clark
Barab: Cosmos Cantata
Genres: Pop, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (21) - Disc #1


     

CD Details

 

CD Reviews

A Humanist Review
J. Burton | 10/07/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Cosmos Cantata text by Kurt Vonnegut, music by Seymour Barab, with the Manhattan Chamber Orchestra conducted by Richard Auldon Clark Pleasantville, NY: Kleos Classics, 2001: 56 minutes



Years ago, Vonnegut attended the New York City premiere of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Requiem, based on the choral mass for the dead promulgated by the Counter-Reformation Council of Trent. He liked the music but found the lyrics so offensive--"terrible and sadistic"--that he rushed home to write a humanist requiem. The text was published in his "autobiographical collage," Fates Worse Than Death, and has now been set to music by New York composer Seymour Barab as the Cosmos Cantata, a title taken from the poem's opening line, "Rest eternal grant them, O Cosmos, and let not light disturb their peace."



Vonnegut's thoroughly humanistic and moving text is beautifully rendered by tenor Frederick Urrey in Barab's extraordinary, scintillating score. (Who concocted the myth that humanism is a dry, totally left-brain thing?) Text and music blend smoothly, assisting each other to reach emotional high points. The cantata is well worth listening to over and over again.



Supplementing the Vonnegut-Barab twenty-five minute cantata are Barab's sprightly "Dances for Oboe and Strings" and his humorous Moments Macabres, eight delightfully humorous and morbid short pieces from anonymous poems in The Oxford Book of Light Verse (edited by W. H. Auden), sung by Urrey. Barab, who deserves to be more well known, is a composer of great talent, wit, and inventiveness.



Edd Doerr, president of the American Humanist Association"