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The text is the Song of Simeon from Luke 2:29–32:
Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word;
for mine eyes have seen thy salvation,
which thou hast prepared before the face of all people;
to be a light to lighten the Gentiles,
and to be the glory of thy people Israel.
Arvo Pärt’s Nunc dimittis did not grab me right away. At first, I found it almost too still — spare, slow, and hovering at the edge of boredom. But that seems to be part of how the piece works. It does not seize the listener by force. It waits. It asks for patience.
By the end, the music had done something I was not expecting. The quietness accumulated. The long lines, the luminous harmonies, and the text’s sense of release began to feel less like restraint and more like surrender. Simeon’s words — “Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace” — are not dramatic in the ordinary sense. They are the sound of someone who has seen enough, received enough, and can finally let go.
I caught shades of Bear McCreary’s Battlestar Galactica writing here, especially “Passacaglia”: music that seems static until the repetition starts to feel like fate gathering in the walls.
I began the piece slightly bored. I ended it in tears. That may be the best description of Pärt’s power here: the music seems almost empty until you realize it has been making room for something.


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