La Pasión según San Marcos (St. Mark Passion) is a contemporary classical composition by Argentinian composer Osvaldo Golijov. It was finished in 2000 and is amongst Golijov's most well known compositions. It is famous for combining several Latin and African musical styles.
At first, Golijov refused to take part in the project, because the Passion was meant to be a Christian composition, while Golijov himself was Jewish. Even though he was commissioned the composition in 1996, he started composing it two years later, while he studied the New Testament and the Catholic tradition. When Golijov presented the composition in rehearsals, Rilling himself asked him if "it was a Passion", for he was very surprised about the result.[2]
The composition is in two parts and takes approximately 87 minutes to perform. It is divided into 34 movements, even though movements 11 and 12 are blended together as one movement. The complete movement list is as follows:
Part I
Visión: Bautismo en la cruz (Vision: Baptism on the Cross)
Danza del pescador pescado (Dance of the Ensnared Fisherman)
Primer anuncio (First Announcement)
Segundo anuncio (Second Announcement)
Tercer anuncio: En fiesta no (Third Announcement: Not on the Feast Day)
Dos días (Two Days)
Unción en Betania (The Anointment in Bethany)
¿Por qué? (Why?)
Oración Lucumí (Aria con grillos) (Lukumi Prayer (Aria with Crickets))
El primer día (The First Day)
Judas
El cordero pascual (The Paschal Lamb)
Quisiera yo renegar (Aria de Judas) (I Wish to Forswear (Aria of Judas))
Eucaristía (The Eucharist)
Demos gracias al Señor (We Give Thanks to the Lord)
En el Monte de los Olivos (On the Mount of Olives)
Cara a cara (Face to Face)
En Getsemaní (In Gethsemane)
Agonía (Aria de Jesús) (Agony (Aria of Jesus))
Arresto (The Arrest)
Danza de la sábana blanca (Dance of the White Sheet)
Part II
Ante Caifás (Before Caiaphas)
Soy yo (Confesión) (I am (Confession))
Escarnio y negación (Scorn and Denial)
Desgarro de la túnica (Tearing of the Garment)
Lúa descolorida (Aria de las lágrimas de Pedro) (Colorless Moon (Aria of Peter's Tears)
Amanecer: Ante Pilato (Morning: Before Pilate)
Silencio (Silence)
Sentencia (Sentence)
Comparsa al Gólgotha (Parade: To Golgotha)
Danza de la sábana púrpura – Manto sagrado (Dance of the Holy Purple Robe)
All movements are joined by an attacca, except for movements 2 to 3, and 26 to 27. The score also has frequent stage indications for performers and a guide on how the sound system should be set up. The texts are extracted from Mark's Gospel, the Kaddish, Lamentations of Jeremiah, Psalms 113–119, and texts by Galician author Rosalía de Castro.
Critical reception
Even though the audience was shocked for the innovative character of the composition, it was very well received by public and critics, with a 25-minute standing ovation in the premiere. The New York Times and The Boston Globe called it "a work of genius".[4] The latter also added that "the Pasión will stand as the first indisputably great composition of the 21st century." Alex Ross, from The New Yorker, said about the piece: "It drops like a bomb on the belief that classical music is an exclusively European art."[5]
A 2010 recording by Deutsche Grammophon, performed by Biella Da Costa, Jessica Rivera, Reynaldo González-Fernández, María Guinand, Orquesta La Pasión, and Schola Cantorum de Venezuela.[9]