Product Description
The Messe de Minuit was written around 1694 for the Jesuit church of Saint-Louis in Paris.What is remarkable about this mass is the use of ten French noëls (Christmas carols) in the composition.
In the liturgy the birth of Christ is celebrated with three masses: the first during the night of December 24th, the second in the early morning of December 25th, and the third on the day itself. A special atmosphere surrounds the first of these masses on account of the midnight hour, and so Charpentier gave special expression to the long observed practice in France of including popular Christmas carols in the Christmas liturgy by including them in the composition of his midnight mass. Although the Council of Trent had forbidden this kind of borrowing of secular melodies in masses in principle, long established customs were tolerated.
Charpentiers justly famous Messe de Minuit represents a "perfect synthesis" between the secular and liturgical, and between the popular and learned. Adapting the vast majority of the Latin mass to French noëls, the Messe de Minuits fresnhess and joyful spirit perfectly represent Advent.
While Charpentier used ten different noëls through the course of the work, the most serious moment of the mass, the statements of Christs incarnation, his mortal existence, and his death under Pontius Pilate, is given wholly original, appropriately sober music.
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