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About
The 'seven last words' of Christ are the final statements Chris made as he endured the crucifixion. They are found through the four Gospels although none of the Gospels presents all of them. They are often responses to specific events detailed by the Gospel writers, and therefore do not represent a linked narrative flow.
Setting seven apparently unrelated statements posed a musical challenge. To the biblical texts I have added two traditional Latin texts. A short section from the Good Friday hymn Vexilla Regis opens and closes the work, and the antiphon of Good Friday Crux fidelis (Faithful cross) is sung before Christ's final words.
The music establishes a meditative tone from the beginning presenting fragments of the Gregorian chant melody Victimae Paschali ('Christians, to the Paschal Lamb offer your thankful praises...'). This melody is also woven through the musical fabric of the work generating some of the melodic material, notably the violin solo about halfway through the work and the melody for the setting of Crux fidelis. The music reaches a violent climax point at Christ's words 'It is finished!', before subsiding to a restatement of earlier music, briefly building again at Christ's repeated cries of 'Father.' Throughout the work there is a deliberately uneasy juxtaposition of major and minor versions of the same chord.
In my choice of versions of the text I have left the more archaic forms such as "Thou" in those utterances directed by Christ to God, and used more contemporary language in those directed to others.
Seven Last Words from the Cross was revised for performance by Auckland choir Bach Musica (conductor Rita Paczian) for choir's 2008 concert series.
Commissioned note
Commisioned by the NZSO
Text note
Text in Latin and English from the Bible
Performance history
22 Apr 1999: Performed by Voices New Zealand (now Tower Voices New Zealand) and members of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra; Festival of Sacred Music, Noumea