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Anton Bruckner (1824–96)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 May 2021

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Summary

Anton Bruckner: Motet for Men's Choir

for Crispin Lewis

Sweat prickled the rehearsal-room walls

as the composer raged and spat.

‘Too bloody loud. It's triple p.

And – God help us – you’re flat flat flat!’

(The sixteen choristers sat in silence,

chins in, waiting to be dismissed.

They’d have an hour before the concert,

an hour after – at least they could get pissed.)

‘Those final bars are a whisper, a dying fall.

They should barely reach me in the organ-loft.

Can't you get it into your turd-brains?

Not just soft, but softer than soft!’

*

Schnapps followed beer and hatched the plot

as the Angelus-bell began to chime:

at the finale, they would all open their mouths,

but no one would sing. The choir would mime.

*

Framed by organ-stops above the hushed nave,

the composer could not believe his ears:

a handful of notes – just this once, his notes –

joining the music of the spheres …

OLIVER REYNOLDS

May, 1945

As the Allied tanks trod Germany to shard

and no man had seen a fresh-pressed uniform

for six months, as the fire storm

bit out the core of Dresden yard by yard,

as farmers hid turnips for the after-war,

as cadets going to die passed Waffen SS

tearing identifications from their battledress,

the Russians only three days from the Brandenburger Tor –

in the very hell of sticks and blood and brick dust

as Germany the phoenix burned, the wraith

of History pursed its lips and spoke, thus:

To go with teeth and toes and human soap,

the radio will broadcast Bruckner's Eighth

so that good and evil may die in equal hope.

PETER PORTER

Type
Chapter
Information
Accompanied Voices
Poets on Composers: From Thomas Tallis to Arvo Pärt
, pp. 72 - 73
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2015

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