“…haunting…a stunning musical
achievement….The Missa Brevis is a curious,
intensely personalized collage of both the Latin Mass and
Hebrew sacred service elements. The brilliant and
demanding use of cellos in the opening Praeludium and
throughout the piece covering an enormous tessitura and
frequently employing harmonics, produces an amazing
resemblance to the standard string quartet. The Kyrie, a
reverent, whispered breathing of the name of the Lord,
leads into the two Omni sections, both of which employ
the more intensely coloristic qualities of the cello,
coupled with a vocal strand which is persisitently serene
and ethereal. A mad, frenzied swirling of notes at the
end of the fourth movement ushers in the intensely tragic
Lacrymosa, complete with morunful descents of sobbing
minor second intervals. In the sixth movement David and
Sibyl are engaged in an eerie Twilight Zone sort of
dialogue, haunted by ghostly quivering harmonics, and a
voice floating like a sould lost in deep space. the Dies
Irae briefly epitomizes the violent outburst of an angry
God towards a fallen mankind, but the Eli section, while
obviously not Christ’s scriptural quotation spoiken
from the cross, seems to reflect the less complex
poignancy of David conversing with the Lord in Psalm 22.
Finally, the Sanctus, austerely written for cellos alone,
allows for a prayerful and yet somehow frustratingly
tentative Omein (Amen) to conclude this brooding and
tragic lament.
–Dale Shepfer, American Record
Guide, October, 1982
“[Fine]
writes…elegant and inventive works….The
ten-part mass…left an impression of distant times
and cool cathedrals.”
–Donal Henahan, New
York Times, April 17, 1973
“comforting as a saintly touch [and] just as
beautiful….moving and almost hypnotic, like the
best vocal pieces of Crumb and Berio.”
–Paul Hertelendy, Oakland
Tribune, March 10 and 17, 1974
“…lovely…The collage of voice
tracks…and cello accompaniment creates a haunting
piece that leaves a lasting impression.”
–John Ditsky, Fanfare,
1982
“…a most original work…a moving
statement.”
–Robert Commanday, San Francisco
Chronicle,October 24, 1982