Today marks the beginning of
Advent, the period of preparation for the arrival of God-made-man. Many
traditions mark these four weeks before Christmas with contemplation and
reflection, with prayer and music.
I myself crack out the
Christmas CDs and go through way too many candles, because both help me through
this dark period.
Let’s have a definitive Advent
piece to start us off, “Veni Veni Emmanuel”. Veni is one of the “O Antiphons”
sung at Vespers during the during the octave before Christmas (17-23 December).
So technically, it’s a little early for it, but it’s my blog, my rules.
Here it’s performed by The
Gesualdo Six, a small, recently-formed British group devoted to renaissance
polyphony. I like their restraint in a song that often ends up being a Katy-bar-the-door
choral blow-out.
The Gesualdo Six are singing
it in Latin, which I think flows with more grace than the English translation.
They skipped over several of the verses, including one we could really, really
stand to consider this year.
Veni, veni Rex Gentium,
veni, Redemptor omnium,
ut salvas tuos famulos
peccati sibi conscios.
O come, Desire of the nations,
bind
in one the hearts of all
mankind;
bid every strife and quarrel
cease
and fill the world with heaven’s
peace.
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