Missa Laudato Si’
Saturday, March 15th 2025 | 7:30pm
JoAnn Rooney Hall | Mundelein Center for the Arts
1020 W Sheridan Rd Chicago, IL 60660
Missa Laudato Si’ is a new work written by Dongryul Lee in the spirit of Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical, Laudato Si’, which calls on humanity to urgently address the climate crisis. In the form of a Mass, Missa Laudato Si’ contemplates climate change and caring for the earth by intertwining the Latin Mass text with prayers, poems, and texts about contaminated soil and water, and all the threatened creatures living under the climate and plastic crises, including “the tragic effects of environmental degradation on the lives of the world’s poorest.”
This performance will be held in collaboration with Loyola University Choirs in conjunction with the annual Loyola Climate Conference.
About the Composer
Seoul-born Chicago based composer Dongryul Lee (이동렬 [iː doŋ ɾjəɾ], pronouns: he/him) crafts music that entwines the acoustical nature of sounds with clarity, pathos, and reinvented classical expressions. He finds inspirations in spiritual, literary, and scientific elements, encompassing a diverse range of topics from Borgesian poetics and Jungian Philosophy to Number Theory, Artificial Intelligence, and Engineering Campanology, oftentimes employing yearlong in-depth interdisciplinary research. The dual identities of his backgrounds, a Korean immigrant living in the States, a born Catholic and learned Buddhist thinker, and a composer with a computer science degree, also greatly influence his musical language.
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Missa Laudato Si’ is a new mass written in the spirit of Pope Francis’s 2015 encyclical, Laudato Si’, where he deplored: “For human beings to degrade the integrity of the earth by causing changes in its climate, […] for human beings to contaminate the earth’s waters, its land, its air, and its life – these are sins.” In the form of a Mass, it contemplates climate change and caring for the earth by intertwining the Latin Mass text with prayers, poems, and texts about contaminated soil and water, and all the threatened creatures living under the climate and plastic crises, including “the tragic effects of environmental degradation on the lives of the world’s poorest.”
When Kirsten approached me in the summer of 2023 with her vision of creating a new ecological mass setting, I saw significant possibilities. I view this opportunity to create a mass, one of the oldest musical art forms, as a vehicle to convey forward-looking perspectives and propose an emotional and spiritual solution to one of humanity’s most urgent and critical issues, focusing on the voices of the earth and the marginalized.
The mass encompasses a full spectrum of human expression, including forgiveness, anger, lament, celebration, despair, joy, faith, awe, and mercy. It infuses the traditional Missa Solemnis text without the Credo and Sanctus section, while including an additional Ite, missa est section—with additional texts from Canticle of the Creatures and Laudes Creaturarum by Saint Francis of Assisi, poems by refugee poets such as Syrian poet Abdullah Kasem Al Yatim (used with permission), names and other data of critically endangered species from the IUCN RedList (The International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species— www.iucnredlist.org, used with permission), poems by the Korean zen-poet Shiva Ryu and from Pope Francis’ Missa Laudato Si,’ with various sound sources from my research, including the Schumann resonance of the earth—an electromagnetic low frequency ‘breath’ of the earth.
Pragmatically, Missa Laudato Si’ is designed to be performed by university-level choir singers. The performance difficulty is meticulously calibrated so that student singers can actively participate, supported by graduate-level/professional performers who handle the more virtuosic material. I aim for this opportunity to be a transformative experience for students, deepening their understanding of the interconnectedness of our planet and cultivating awareness of our spiritual connection to the rest of creation. By participating in the performance of the mass, students will have an immersive opportunity to actively engage in climate activism through the arts.
The first movement, Kyrie eleison, was performed in April 2024 by Loyola’s Ignatian Voices (Kirsten Hedegaard, instructor), University Chorale (Kirsten Hedegaard, instructor), University Singers (Jennifer Budziak, instructor), along with the New Earth Ensemble from The EcoVoice Project (The EcoVP) in Madonna della Strada Chapel in Chicago. The entire mass cycle will be world-premiered in March 2025 with the same performance forces. Missa Laudato Si’ is commissioned by and dedicated with deep admiration to Kirsten Hedegaard.
Dongryul Lee