You’ve heard this lovely aria before, haven’t you? I’d probably heard it first in the movie Donnie Darko. Haunting, though it hadn’t really haunted me as much as it might have. (That could be said of the movie as well as the music.)
But one morning this week, during my commute, the DJ for the local classical station gave this piece a memorable introduction: This ‘Ave Maria’, though commonly attributed to the 16th-/17th-century Italian composer Giulio Caccini, is almost certainly a hoax. In fact (said the DJ), this piece was most likely composed around 1970 by a Russian who rejoiced in the name of Vladimir Vavilov… and who had a habit of publishing his original compositions as ‘Anonymous’, or under false attributions. Vavilov — a lutenist as well as a composer — evidently recorded his ‘Ave Maria’ for a Soviet state-owned record label, presenting it as some anonymous Baroque composition he had uncovered. After his death, it somehow picked up the Caccini attribution, and has been widely recorded since. (The fact that the aria’s only text consists of the two words ‘ave Maria’, rather than the full text of the prayer, seems to be a sign that it was written somewhere outside the spatio-temporal bounds of Latin Christendom — bogus as a three-rouble note.)
But the DJ, before he spun the record, gave this particular screw still another turn: He suggested that Vavilov might have borrowed the melody for his ‘anonymous’ aria from Jerome Kern’s 1939 standard ‘All the Things You Are’ — making this ‘Ave Maria’ not just a hoax, but a joke.
Credible? Judge for yourself:
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
- Text by Archangel Gabriel
- addressing mother of God Incarnate
- Latin
- translation from divinely-inspired Greek text of Saint Luke
- presumably translated from Gabriel’s Aramaic (Hebrew?) original
- translation from divinely-inspired Greek text of Saint Luke
- Composed and recorded by Russian lutenist circa 1970
- Published as anonymous work
- Distributed by Soviet state-owned record company
- Communist
- godless
- Communist
- Wrongly attributed to Baroque-era Italian composer
- Likely adapted from 1939 Broadway show-tune
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