Thursday, August 25, 2016

Music for August 28, 2016 + The Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Rally Day

Vocal Music
  • Bread of the World – Carlton Young, arr. (b. 1926)
Instrumental Music
  • Gather Us In – arr. Donald M. Verkuilen III (21st C.)
  • Let Us Break Bread Together - Charles Callahan (b. 1951)
  • Shine, Jesus, Shine – David Blackwell, arr. (b. 1961)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)

Hymn 450 - All hail the power of Jesus’ name! (Coronation)
Hymn R37 - Father we love you  (Glorify your name )
Hymn 598 - Lord Christ, when first thou cam’st to earth (Mit Freuden zart)
Hymn 376 - Joyful, joyful, we adore thee (Hymn to Joy)
Hymn R149 - I, the Lord of Sea and Sky (Here I am, Lord)
Hymn R206 - Holy, holy (Holy holy)
Hymn R247 - Lord, the light of your love is shining (Shine, Jesus, Shine)
Psalm 112 - Beatus vir (Tone V)

For our first Sunday back after three months vacation we are singing a simple setting of a Southern melody. The tune CHARLESTON was first found in The United States Sacred Harmony in 1799; it's become very popular in the last 40 years as the tune for the text "All who love and serve your city," as found at hymn 571 in our hymnal. But it is the text for the communion hymn "Bread of the world in mercy broken," (Hymn 301 in our book) that Carlton Young pairs with this tune. He treats the first stanza with choir in unison, but on the second stanza, the tonality changes to a minor mode and the tenors and basses sing together in unison. The trebles join for the second half and at the conclusion of the second (and final) stanza, he has the choir return to the first stanza in the original major key in canon.
Carlton R. (Sam) Young
Carlton Young has had more influence on what the United Methodist have sung in the last half century than probably anyone since John and Charles Wesley started the movement in the 18th century. He has had the unique distinction of serving as editor of two revisions of the Methodist hymnal: THE METHODIST HYMNAL, 1966; and THE UNITED METHODIST HYMNAL, 1989. Dr. Young, known to his friends as "Sam", has served on the church music faculties at three major United Methodist Schools: Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University; Scarritt College; and Candler School of Theology, Emory University. Known more for his scholarly efforts than for his compositions, he has, however, arranged or written many hymns and choral pieces. His harmonization of "What Wondrous Love is This" is used in the accompaniment edition of our hymnal.

Donald Verkuilen III
The organ voluntaries today are proof that hymnody is not a dying tradition. I present two organ voluntaries on hymns written since 1980. Gather Us In is found in the Renew hymnal in our pews, and is a rollicking gathering song for worship. Marty Haugen, the writer of both tune and text, is an American who is a member of the United Church of Christ. His hymn is now in over 25 hymnals worldwide. This toccata is by Donald Verkuilen, the organist-choir master at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and was chosen for inclusion in Bayoubuchlein, a collection of organ works based on contemporary hymns published by and for the 2016 National Convention of the American Guild of Organists which was held here in Houston this past May.

The closing voluntary is an organ arrangement of one of our church's favorites, Shine, Jesus, Shine. It is arranged by the English organist and composer David Blackwell. He studied music at Edinburgh University, Scotland, and then pursued a career in music publishing, finishing his career as Head of Music Publishing at Oxford University Press. He now works as a freelancer composer, editor, and journalist.


Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Music for August 21, 2016 + The Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Instrumental Music
  • Trumpet Voluntary – Gordon Young (1919-1998)
  • Savior, Like a Shepherd Lead Us – William Bradbury (1816-1868)
  • The Wayfaring Stranger – Old Southern Melody
  • Balm in Gilead – Negro Spiritual
  • Praise Him! Praise Him! – Chester G. Allen (1838-1878)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)
  • Hymn 8 - Morning has broken (Bunnessan)
  • Hymn R250 - O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder (O Stor Gud)
  • Hymn 368 - Holy Father, great Creator (Regent Square)
  • Hymn 325 - Let us break bread together on our knees (Let Us Break Bread)
  • Hymn 493 - O for a thousand tongues to sing (Azmon)
  • Hymn 411-  Psalm 103, O bless the Lord, my soul (St. Thomas (Williams))       
This Sunday, being the last real Sunday of Summer (School starts back in Kingwood on the 22nd), I am taking the Sunday off to go on holiday. No AGO convention, no choir camp, no music conference, just four days with friends in Mexico. In my absence we are fortunate to have Jill Kirkonis to play the organ for us. I made it easy on her and told her I would not be having a soloist on this last Summer Sunday without the choir, just her, playing an organ offertory. She has chosen to play an arrangement of the hymn-tune BRADBURY, the melody which 80% of hymnals use for the words Savior, Like a Shepherd Lead Us. (Not us Episcopalians, however. We've used the tune SICILIAN MARINERS for the tune since 1916.)

BRADBURY was written by William Batchelder Bradbury, a Baptist organist and choir director who was well know throughout the Protestant churches in the first part of the 20th century. In the 1914 book Biographies of Gospel Song and Hymn Writers, J. H. Hall wrote
The churchgoing people of today are generally familiar with the name Wm. B. Bradbury. Many have cherished that name from childhood. Most of us began our musical experiences by singing his songs, and as early experiences are the most lasting, we will carry these melodies, with their happy associations, through life.
William Batchelder Bradbury was born at York, York County, Maine, October 6, 1816. He came of a good family. He spent the first few years of his life on his father's farm, and rainy days would be spent in the shoe-shop, as was the general custom in those days. He loved music, and would spend his spare hours in studying and practicing such music as he could find. In 1830 his parents removed to Boston, where he saw and heard for the first time a piano and organ, as well as various other instruments. The effect was to lead him to devote his life to the service of music. Accordingly he took lessons upon the organ, and as early as 1831: had achieved some reputation as an organist.
After some months he was asked to preside at the organ of a certain church at a salary of twenty-five dollars per annum. On trying the organ he found it to be one of those ancient affairs which required the keys to be pulled up as well as pressed down, and he suggested that his pay should be at least fifty dollars, since the playing required this double duty. It was not long till a better paying situation was offered him — that of one hundred dollars a year.
Later there came a call to take charge of the music of the First Baptist Church of Brooklyn, New York. There was some opposition to the organ among the members, but
he took pains to play it so well, and in such good taste, that he speedily won all to favor its use. After a year's work here the important era in his career began. He took charge of the choir and organ of the Baptist Tabernacle, New York City, and in addition started a singing class for the young.
William Bradbury
William B. Bradbury, along with Drs. Lowell Mason and George F. Root, was responsible for the popularity of the singing schools that sprang up in American churches and Sunday Schools in the 19th century. He was unceasingly active, having edited fifty-nine books of sacred and secular music, a large part of which were his own work.

Despite his immense popularity in his lifetime, and the number of hymns and Sunday School songs he wrote (close to 200) only one of his hymn-tunes is included in our hymnal, but it is universally well known. It is WOODBURY, known to all of us as Just as I am. He also wrote the music for Jesus Loves Me.

Chester G. Allen, who wrote the stirring Gospel tune that is used for today's closing voluntary,  was also known as a teacher, composer and musical writer., though at a much lesser degree than Bradbury. He taught music in Cleveland, Ohio public schools. He also edited and compiled collections of music for schools and churches, containing many of his own compositions.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Music for August 14, 2016 + The Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Vocal Music
  • Open My Eyes – Clara H. Scott (1841-1897) Bruce Bailey, tenor
Instrumental Music 
Three Antiphons
 from Vêpres du commun des fêtes de la Sainte Vierge, Op.18 – Marcel Dupré (1886 – 1971)
  • Antiphon I: While the King sitteth at his table (Song of Solomon 1:12)
  • Antiphon III: I am black but comely, O Ye Daughters of Jerusalem (Song of Solomon 7:6)
  • Antiphon V: How Fair and how Pleasant art Thou (Song of Solomon 1:5)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982.)
  • Hymn 366 - Holy God, we praise thy Name (Grosser Gott)
  • Hymn 537 - Open your ears, O faithful people (Torah Song)
  • Hymn 495 - Hail, thou once despised Jesus (In Babilone)
  • Hymn 490 - I want to walk as a child of the light (Houston)
  • Hymn 473 - Lift high the cross (Crucifer)
  • Psalm 80:1-2, 8-18, Tone VIIIa, refrain by Jackson Hearn
A couple of weeks ago, Bruce Bailey came into my office inquiring about a hymn that he had sung growing up. Bruce and I share the same background of growing up in the Methodist Church, often singing out of the Cokesbury Worship Hymnal, a slim, brown hymnal from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South that contained many hymns and gospel songs that were popular in the middle of the twentieth century. (You can still buy a copy for $14!) The hymn in question was Open My Eyes, That I May See. I recalled that, as a teenager, we joked it was written by Fanny Crosby, a famous blind gospel song writer of the late nineteenth century. (And how a teenage boy in rural Tennessee knew about blind hymn writers of the 1800s is still a mystery.) My copy of the Cokesbury Hymnal lists Charles H. Scott as the composer. It turns out that is wrong.
Clara H. Scott

Open My Eyes, That I May See was written in 1895 by Clara H. Scott, a Midwesterner who taught music at the Ladies' Seminary, in Lyons, Iowa. She married Henry Clay Scott in 1861, and in 1882 published the Royal Anthem Book, the first volume of choir anthems published by a woman.

Horatio R. Palmer, an influential church musician in Chicago and later New York City, was a source of encouragement for Scott, and helped her publish many of her songs. This hymn first appeared in Best Hymns No. 2, by Elisha A. Hoffman & Harold F. Sayles in 1895. Three collections were issued before her untimely death, in a buggy accident cause by a runaway horse in Dubuque, Iowa.

Bruce will be singing it this Sunday in an arrangement of mine where I combine the melody by Scott with the accompaniment of Franz Schubert's Ave Maria, so if it sounds familiar when the piano starts, that's why. With some minor adjustments in harmony, the two go well together. Schubert will be turning over in his grave.

Marcel Dupré
The organ music is by the famed French organist, Marcel Dupré.  Dupré was the foremost French organ virtuoso of his time, an heir to the great tradition of Romantic French organ playing and composing. In addition to his technical prowess, Dupré was well known for his ability to improvise.

Ninety-seven years ago on August 15, 1919, Dupré was substituting for the regular organist at Notre Dame for Vespers. The office of Vespers includes five psalms, a hymn, and the Magnificat. An antiphon (a short scriptural text) is sung before each Psalm. Dupré improvised 15 organ responses to the Psalms, Ave maris stella, and Magnificat.

An Englishman, Claude Johnson, the General Managing Director of Rolls-Royce, was attending Vespers. A man of great vision and sensitivity, he was struck by the beauty of Dupré’s music and wanted to buy a copy of it.

On being told that it had been improvised, and therefore not written down, he at once persuaded Dupré to try to recapture his original inspiration and commissioned the set of 15 pieces. They appeared the following year. It is three of the five antiphons, based on verses from the Song of Solomon, that I am playing today.



Friday, August 5, 2016

Music for August 7, 2016 + The Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost

Vocal Music

  • Panis Angelicus – César Franck (1822-1890) Richard Murray, baritone

Instrumental Music

  • Variations on Holy Manna – Raymond H. Haan (b. 1938)
  • Deck Thyself, My Soul, with Gladness – Mark Knickelbein (21st C.)
  • Festive Trumpet Tune – David German (b. 1954)

Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)

  • Hymn 636 - How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord (Foundation)
  • Hymn R37 - Father we love you  (Glorify your name )
  • Hymn 178 - Alleluia, alleluia! Give thanks to the risen Lord (Alleluia No. 1)
  • Hymn 707 - Take my life, and let it be consecrated (Hollingside)
  • Hymn 335 - I am the bread of life (I Am the Bread of Life )
  • Hymn 494 - Crown him with many crowns (Diademata)
  • Psalm 33 - Exultate, justi (refrain by Jacques Berthier)
Richard Murray sings one of the classics of sacred music this Sunday when he sings César Franck's Panis Angelicus. The text is part of the hymn Sacris solemniis written by Saint Thomas Aquinas. "Panis Angelicus" is often treated as a separate hymn and set to music, just as Franck did in his Messe solennelle in A major, Op.12. There it was written for tenor solo with cello, harp, and organ accompaniment. We will be singing the entire Messe solennelle in the spring.

Franck
Unlike many musicians whose parents had other aspirations for their children, César Franck was encouraged by his father to pursue a career as a virtuoso pianist. But at the Paris Conservatoire he failed to achieve the necessary distinction as a performer, so he turned his attention to composition and the organ. (Can’t play piano? Be an organist!) It was a smart move, for he became famouse in Paris as organist at the newly built church of Ste Clotilde, with its Cavaillé-Coll organ. He drew to himself a loyal and devoted circle of pupils and in 1871 became organ professor at the Conservatoire.

 As a composer, his best known orchestral works are the Symphonic Variations for solo piano and orchestra and the Symphony in D minor. Though he was best known in his day as a very distinguished organist, Franck wrote remarkably little for the instrument on which his improvisations had won him fame and pupils. The Organ pieces he did write, however, form the backbone of French Romantic organ literature, and have never gone out of style.

Raymond Haan
The variations on the hymn Holy Manna (used twice in the Hymnal 1982 - #238 and #580) were written by a public school educator to whom music was just a sideline. Raymond H. Haan was born in Falmouth, Michigan in 1938. As a boy, his piano teacher told him he'd never be a musician.Though it was his dream, he realized there was no way he could support himself as a musician in his denomination, the Christian Reformed Church and, as he says "...at that time leaving my church was not an option." So despite his desire to write music, he never took a music course of any kind.

Instead he became a middle school, then a high school English teacher and wrote music in his spare time-while also playing the organ, directing several choirs and being a father to four children. He became the Director of Music for the Cutlerville East Christian Reformed Church in Grand Rapids when he was 22, and had this position for over 50 years.

Even in his spare time, he was able to write more than 500 compositions published by 24 music companies. Retired from teaching, his children grown, Haan can now give his music more attention. He still lives in Cutlerville, Michigan and his hobbies include bicycling, tennis and golf.

Mark Knickelbein
From a new collection of piano pieces based on hymns of Baptism and Holy Communion we find the communion voluntary by the young Lutheran composer Mark Knickelbein. Each piece in this volume highlights specific stanzas and uses effective text painting to feature each theme. This piece based on the German chorale Schmücke dich begins in a very similar way to the famous Canon in D by Pachelbel before adding the chorale melody. This neo-Baroque style continues through the first verse, and then, when the second stanza (from the Lutheran Hymnal, "Hasten as a bride to meet Him") begins, he switches to a Renaissance Dance rhythm, 123, 123, 12, 12 for a lively, hastening feel.

Mark Knickelbein is the editor of music/worship at Concordia Publishing House and an active composer and church musician. He has a Bachelor of Science in Education from Martin Luther College, New Ulm, MN and Master of Arts in Music from Concordia University Chicago. He previously worked as an organist and choir director in Lutheran churches.