News
‘the little match girl passion’ new recording
November 15, 2023
Since its premiere by Paul Hillier and Theatre of Voices at Carnegie Hall in 2007, David Lang’s the little match girl passion has been performed close to 600 times in over 40 countries. This season alone there are more than 60 performances across Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, The Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United States! The work has been staged by Glimmerglass Opera, San Francisco Lyric Opera, Vancouver Opera, Portland Opera, l’Opéra National du Rhin, Den Fynske Opera; it has been choreographed by the Paris Opera Ballet, the Royal Swedish Ballet, Leipzig Ballet, Netherlands Dance Theater, New York City Ballet, Ballett am Rhein; and has had theatrical productions in Moscow, London, Edinburgh, Sydney, and Argentina.
Over the past 16 years, it has joined the repertoire as a chamber work, a staged production, a work for full chorus, and a featured event on Christmas and Easter concerts around the world. It has become a contemporary choral classic. After the little match girl passion won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize, Tim Page (music critic for the Washington Post, and Pulitzer juror) commented, “I don’t think I’ve ever been so moved by a new composition… [it] is unlike any music I know.”
In producing this update to the 2010 Grammy-winning recording, Lang sought to deliver “…a leaner version of the piece, a more human version, one that emphasizes every breath, and that heightens the individuality of each singer.”
This new version features singers Molly Netter, Kate Maroney, Gene Stenger, and Dashon Burton — with Sarah Bailey performing the album premiere of Lang’s let me come in, and Trio Mediaeval singing I want to live, plus a new recording of just (after song of songs).
In celebration of this new release the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York presents this ensemble of singers in two free performances of the little match girl passion, January 5-6, 2024.
With a text Lang himself wrote — based on Hans Christian Andersen’s tale, the Gospel According to St. Matthew, and passages from Bach’s St. Matthew Passion — the little match girl passion tells the story of a young girl who is forced to sell matches on the street and freezes to death, unnoticed by the people passing by her.
Lang describes the work:
I wanted to tell a story. A particular story — in fact, the story of The Little Match Girl by the Danish author Hans Christian Andersen. The original is ostensibly for children, and it has that shocking combination of danger and morality that many famous children’s stories do. A poor young girl, whose father beats her, tries unsuccessfully to sell matches on the street, is ignored, and freezes to death. Through it all she somehow retains her Christian purity of spirit, but it is not a pretty story.
What drew me to The Little Match Girl is that the strength of the story lies not in its plot but in the fact that all its parts—the horror and the beauty—are constantly suffused with their opposites. The girl’s bitter present is locked together with the sweetness of her past memories; her poverty is always suffused with her hopefulness. There is a kind of naive equilibrium between suffering and hope.
There are many ways to tell this story. One could convincingly tell it as a story about faith or as an allegory about poverty. What has always interested me, however, is that Andersen tells this story as a kind of parable, drawing a religious and moral equivalency between the suffering of the poor girl and the suffering of Jesus. The girl suffers, is scorned by the crowd, dies, and is transfigured. I started wondering what secrets could be unlocked from this story if one took its Christian nature to its conclusion and unfolded it, as Christian composers have traditionally done in musical settings of the Passion of Jesus.
The most interesting thing about how the Passion story is told is that it can include texts other than the story itself. These texts are the reactions of the crowd, penitential thoughts, statements of general sorrow, shock, or remorse. These are devotional guideposts, the markers for our own responses to the story, and they have the effect of making the audience more than spectators to the sorrowful events onstage. These responses can have a huge range—in Bach’s “Saint Matthew Passion,” these extra texts range from famous chorales that his congregation was expected to sing along with to completely invented characters, such as the “Daughter of Zion” and the “Chorus of Believers.” The Passion format—the telling of a story while simultaneously commenting upon it—has the effect of placing us in the middle of the action, and it gives the narrative a powerful inevitability.
My piece is called the little match girl passion and it sets Hans Christian Andersen’s story The Little Match Girl in the format of Bach’s Saint Matthew Passion, interspersing Andersen’s narrative with my versions of the crowd and character responses from Bach’s Passion. The text is by me, after texts by Han Christian Andersen, H. P. Paulli (the first translator of the story into English, in 1872), Picander (the nom de plume of Christian Friedrich Henrici, the librettist of Bach’s Saint Matthew Passion), and the Gospel according to Saint Matthew. The word “passion” comes from the Latin word for suffering. There is no Bach in my piece and there is no Jesus—rather the suffering of the Little Match Girl has been substituted for Jesus’s, elevating (I hope) her sorrow to a higher plane.