One of the most important poetic creations of the 20th century, ‘The Waste Land’ is almost a stream of consciousness, with characters and viewpoints from Medieval legend to Hindu teaching – and even a scene in a bar.
It proffers optimism and pessimism in the same breath. This programme intersperses readings from it with Renaissance music, choral works from Eliot’s time and new commissions.
The shadowy world of the Tenebrae Responsories by Spanish master Victoria – sung at their rarely heard but intended lower pitch – is present throughout the programme. Also from the late 16th century, William Byrd’s Deus, venerunt gentes chillingly describes a land wasted through intolerance.
Out of this flow further world premières by Joanna Marsh. And reflecting Indian motifs in The Waste Land, Shruthi Rajasekar’s Ganga’s peace.
50 years before T.S Eliot’s ground-breaking poem, Manley Hopkins’ sonnet God’s Grandeur offers hope that ‘…and for all this, nature is never spent.’ This is sung in Leighton’s rapturous setting while Joanna Marsh takes up John F.Deane’s response to it, The world is charged, challenging us to contemplate our own reaction to recent times.
As Eliot concludes his poem with a request for peace but no easy way to create it, Re-Wilding The Waste Land avoids a simplistic response. Instead, old and new music and poetry mirror the cycles of creation, encouraging reflection and hope.
A free wheelchair accessible minibus service between Audley End Station and Saffron Hall will be in operation for this event.