- I Love You, O My God Most High – David Hogan (1949-1996)
- Aria – Charles Callahan (b. 1951)
- Andante in D Major (Variations on a Theme) – Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
- Fanfare– Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens (1823-1881)
- Hymn 372 - Praise to the living God! (Leoni)
- Hymn 421 - All glory be to God on high (Allein Gott in der Hoh)
- Hymn R74 - Cantad al Señor (Cantad al Señor)
- Hymn 533 - How wondrous and great thy works, God of praise! (Lyons)
- Hymn 408 - Sing praise to God who reigns above (Mit Freuden zart)
- Hymn R191 - O Christ, the healer (Erhalt uns, herr)
- Hymn 522 - Glorious things of thee are spoken (Austria)
H. David Hogan and his baby daughter Hilary taken in the early '80s |
A native of Virginia, Hogan graduated from the Peabody Institute at Johns Hopkins University with a bachelor's degree in 1971, and would go on to earn a master's degree in voice in 1975. He enjoyed enormous success both as a composer and teacher and still found time to perform internationally as a concert tenor and pianist. For three years in a row, his students won first place in the Student Composers Competition of the Music Teachers National Association.
Dedicated to God as well as his craft, he had the distinction of being one of the two composers chosen to write new works for the Consecration of the Washington National Cathedral in 1989. Our kids choir learned his Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis a few years ago for the Diocesan Youth Choral Festival. But he also wrote simple sacred music too, such as today’s anthem, written for his small choir at St. Francis Lutheran Church in San Francisco. It’s a simple setting of a traditional Irish melody, Daniel, arranged for two-part mixed choir. Simple but elegant, it uses the text by St Ignatius of Loyola, as translated by Edward Caswall.
I love you, O my Lord most high,
for first your love has captured me;
I seek no other liberty:
bound by your love, I shall be free.
May memory no thought suggest
but shall to your pure glory tend,
may understanding find no rest,
except in you, its only end.
All mine is yours: say but the word,
say what you will, it shall be done;
I know your love, most gracious Lord,
I know you seek my good alone.
Apart from you, nothing can be,
so grant me this, my only wish,
to love you, Lord, eternally,
you give me all in giving this.
The closing voluntary is by Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens, a Belgian organist and composer who renewed the organ-player's art in Belgium. He went to Germany to learn Johann Sebastian Bach's tradition, (at the time Bach's organ works were not at all well known in France) and in 1852 he gave organ recitals in Saint Vincent de Paul, La Madeleine and Saint Eustache churches in Paris, where he stunned audiences with his technique. Particularly notable was his brilliant pedal-playing, which owed a good deal to his studies of Bach's music .
He had been appointed organ teacher at the Royal Brussels Conservatoire at the young age of 26, where he trained numerous young musicians, including two eminent Frenchmen, Alexandre Guilmant and Charles-Marie Widor. He wrote several volumes of organ music, including a two-volume set called École d'orgue basée sur le plain-chant romain (Organ Method based on the Roman Chant), published in 1862 (and still in print!). It includes this Fanfare.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.