Edgar Bainton wrote a
considerable amount of music during his career, including a choral symphony,
two instrumental symphonies, a Fantasia for piano and orchestra, several operas
and many piano pieces, chamber works and songs. It is unfortunate that he is generally
recalled for a single work: And I saw a new Heaven which has
become part of the standard repertoire of ‘choirs and places where they sing’.
The anthem was completed in 1928 and is a setting the first four verses of the
Biblical Book of Revelation, Chapter 21. It is written for four parts (SATB)
with organ accompaniment.
And I saw a new
Heaven is composed in a largely late-romantic style which also has elements of
pastoral modalism, especially in the considerable use of melisma. The listener
will occasionally be reminded of Vaughan Williams’s liturgical music and
possibly the choral elements of An Oxford Elegy. Throughout the
anthem, Bainton makes a subtle fusion of melody and harmony which is always
sympathetic to the text. The general tone reflects the numinous
moment when ‘the former things are passed away’ and St John has his revelatory
vision of Heaven. This music is not triumphant, in spite of the considerable
climax on ‘Behold, the tabernacle of God is with
men’, but is suffused with a sense of beauty and wonder. It
is a deeply felt anthem that meditates on the final consummation of Creation.
It is fitting that a
few Edgar Bainton’s works have been rediscovered in recent years, including
recordings of his Second and Third Symphonies, the Fantasy Concerto and the
String Quartet.
And I saw a new
heaven.
And I saw a new heaven
and a new earth:
For the first heaven
and the first earth were passed away;
and there was no more
sea.
And I John saw the
holy city, new Jerusalem,
coming down from God
out of heaven,
prepared as a bride
adorned for her husband.
And I heard a great
voice out of heaven, saying,
Behold, the tabernacle
of God is with men,
and he will dwell with
them and they shall be his people,
and God himself shall
be with them and be their God.
And God shall wipe
away all tears from their eyes,
and there shall be no
more death, neither sorrow, nor crying,
neither shall there be
any more pain,
for the former things
are passed away.
Revelation,
ch.21 vv.1-4
With thank to the
English Music Festival where this note was first published.
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