I first encountered the Greek Orthodox hymn “Potirion Sotiriu” as the
chanter of the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation in Lincoln, Nebraska.
It’s simplicity of line and mystical drone or “ison” made a most powerful
impression on me as a recent newcomer to the spiritual vision of
Byzantine chant. The text is taken from Psalm 115 of the Greek translation
of the Old Testament known as the Septuagint which was done in Alexandria
at the request of a third-century BCE Egyptian Pharaoh desiring to have
all of the world’s greatest spiritual treasures available to him in his
library. During a recording session in Budapest with composer Victoria
Bond, I happened to sing this chant as she and I were in the glorious St.
Matthias Church. At that moment, she said she would composer
a piano piece for me based on that chant. Ms. Bond had the
formidable challenge of writing a large scale work for piano that on one
hand effectively utilized the resources of the piano but at the same time
preserved the unique mystical aura generated by the chant itself.
After the piece was composed last year, we decided that the most appropriate
format for the performance would be to sing the chant both before and after
the work so that the spiritual world from which the piece emerged was clear.
It also communicates to the audience what I have come to embrace as a champion
of new music: namely that one of the most profound uses of music
is to give the listener the ability to leap artificial temporal boundaries
and embrace the totality of human expression in both the present and in
past ages. Making the past a present reality is also paramount
in the liturgical theology of the Orthodox church where through ancient
ritual, twentieth century believers are mystically united to the past in
ways that illumine the eternal significance of our spiritual ancestors.