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Review: Missy Mazzoli, 'Vespers For A New Dark Age'

Can robots think and feel? Could there be a day when computers control our lives?

Watch the Spike Jonze movie Her, in which Joaquin Phoenix falls in love with an operating system (voiced by Scarlett Johansson), and you get the sense days like these might be just around the corner.

There's a similar vibe to Missy Mazzoli's Vespers for a New Dark Age, a 30-minute suite for singers, chamber ensemble and electronics, which inhabits the sometimes disturbing intersection between technology and humanity. The piece, commissioned by Carnegie Hall for the 2014 Ecstatic Music Festival, takes up the bulk of her new album of the same name, to be released March 31.

/ Courtesy of the artist
/
Courtesy of the artist

Mazzoli's Vespers is an ominous twist on an ancient musical and religious tradition — the evening Vesper prayer service observed in many Orthodox, Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran churches. A "distorted, wild, blasphemous take," Mazzoli says in the album booklet.

Constructed as a suite of eight connected pieces, Vespers aims high, questioning our connections to technology, death and God. Instead of sacred texts, Mazzoli turns to contemporary poet Matthew Zapruder for lines like: "hello lord / sorry I woke you / because my plans / are important to me / and I need things / no one can buy / and don't even know / what they are / I know I belong / in this new dark age." Is it a plea from us, or from some computerized version of us?

Vestiges of old school vespers remain. Soprano voices, including Martha Cluver and Virginia Warnken Kelsey from Roomful of Teeth, soar to high registers, reaching upward as if beckoning for divine intervention. Mazzoli's ensemble Victoire, cleverly orchestrated, provides settings both cinematic and intimate at once, while Wilco drummer Glenn Kotche adds evocative scrims of percussion and some thunderous pounding.

Although the song "A Thousand Tongues," which closes the album, is not part of Mazzoli's Vespers, it feels like it could be. (The title and lyrics come from Stephen Crane: "Yes, I have a thousand tongues, / and nine and ninety-nine lie.") The remix, by Victoire keyboardist Lorna Krier (as Lorna Dune), falls somewhere between electronica, chamber music and the dreamy Twin Peaks soundtrack.

Traditional vespers are filled with songs of rejoicing and praise to God. Mazzoli's Vespers ends with a forbidding final line: "I have done my best to leave / behind this machine / anyone with a mind / who cares to enter."

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Tom Huizenga is a producer for NPR Music. He contributes a wide range of stories about classical music to NPR's news programs and is the classical music reviewer for All Things Considered. He appears regularly on NPR Music podcasts and founded NPR's classical music blog Deceptive Cadence in 2010.
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