Across The Vast Eternal Sky Lyrics

  1. Across The Vast Eternal Sky Lyrics
  2. Across The Vast Eternal Sky Ola Gjeilo Lyrics
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JLHS Choir Winter Concert 2014 Advanced Concert Choir Arr. Silvestri/Ola Gjeilo. SWACDA Regional 11-12 Mixed Honor Choir, Mar 2016, Kansas City, MO.

The lyrics to this piece come from the contemporary poet Charles A. Silvestri, who “specializes in providing bespoke poetry for choral composers.” Rather like a custom tailor, I guess. He has written the lyrics for a number of pieces by the Norwegian choral composer Ola Gjeilo and says of this one that “The fiery sky at sunset was an inspiration for this poem about a phoenix preparing for rebirth.. . . Ola had asked me for several poems relating to the theme of rebirth, and I gave him this twist on the usual theme.”

So what’s the twist? A secondary one might be that Silvestri has the bird itself speaking. I think we’re all vaguely aware that a phoenix is a creature who dies, usually in flames, and then rises anew from its own ashes. There’s quite a variation in the stories of this ever-renewing bird, with the word “phoenix” itself being found in ancient Greek. Many other cultures have had similar tales of the reborn bird; the firebird appears in the Russian version of the story, for instance.

Vast

Enough historical background. Let’s take a look at the actual lyrics of the piece. The phoenix’s feathers are now gray where once they were red and gold (the most common colors used in descriptions), and it knows that soon it will be “born again in flame.” But—and here’s the major twist—it is not going to die on some sort of funeral pyre and then physically rise again, as is usually the case. Instead, it is going to plunge into the sun itself. This meaning is borne out by the first verses of the original poem, words that Gjeilo did not include in his composition:

Weary, I fly,
Across the vast eternal sky,
High in the heavens,
Where awaits my destiny.

Across the vast eternal sky lyrics

Grey skies are thickening;
Soon now my time will come,
Time to return home
‘Cross the vast eternal sky.

Across The Vast Eternal Sky Lyrics

So how is the phoenix going to be reborn if he has disappeared into the sun? The ending lines, both of the poem and of the song, have the bird say this:

Do not despair that I am gone away;
I will appear again
When the sunset paints
Flames across the vast eternal sky!

(All text copyright Charles A. Silvestri–I am including only excerpts of the poem because of that.)

I don’t want to make the mistake of trying to pin down the meaning too strictly here; otherwise I may end up sounding like something from a Hallmark card. I’ll just say that in Silvestri’s hands the myth has become something less literal and more universal. Upon his death the phoenix will be translated, as it were, into another, much larger medium.

Across The Vast Eternal Sky Ola Gjeilo Lyrics

You get two performance videos below. The first one uses the string quartet that the composer called for, and, as an added bonus, Gjeilo is also the pianist. Many performances now use an accordion along with the quartet, a choice I found inexplicable–until my own choir, the Cherry Creek Chorale, used that instrument in a performance. I liked it! So you can listen to that one, too.

Sky

© Debi Simons

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