Friday, June 10, 2016

Music for June 12, 2016



Vocal Music
  • Ride On, King Jesus! – Hall Johnson
Instrumental Music
  • Suite Gothique III. Prière à Notre-Dame – Léon Boëllmann (1862-1897)
  • Suite Gothique IV. Toccata – Léon Boëllmann
  • Farewell to Stromness– Peter Maxwell Davies (1934-2016)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)
  • Hymn 610 - Lord, whose love through humble service (Blaenafren)
  • Hymn 470 - There’s a wideness in God’s mercy (Beecher)
  • Hymn 691 - My faith looks up to thee (Olivet)
  • Hymn 178 - Alleluia, alleluia! give thanks to the risen Lord (Alleluia No. 1)
  • Hymn 410 - Praise, my soul, the King of heaven (Lauda Anima)
We welcome home one of our former staff singers, Allison Gosney, to our worship this morning. She is back in Kingwood after her first year in the graduate program of the Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam, studying vocal performance. You will be delighted to hear her singing the spiritual, Ride On, King Jesus, as arranged by Hall Johnson.

Johnson was born in Athens, Georgia, taught himself to play the violin by reading a book about it, moved to New York City where he played in the orchestra of Broadway musicals, and set out to preserve the heritage of the Negro Spiritual. He arranged spirituals for his own ensemble, the Hall Johnson Singers as well as soloists such as the famed Marion Anderson. He also provided the scores for several films, his last being “Cabin in the Sky” in 1943 with Ethel Waters and Lena Horne.

Peter Maxwell Davies
I first heard Farewell to Stromness this Spring when it was played on the radio in honor of the life of Peter Maxwell Davies, the famed conductor and composer who died in March at age 81. The piano piece is one that is not explicitly religious, but when I heard it, all I could imagine were people quietly coming forward to communion. Stromness is a town on the largest island in Orkney, Scotland, which was threatened in the early 1970s when it was discovered that vast uranium deposits were underground. the South of Scotland Electricity Board wanted to mine the uranium to fuel a nuclear power plant. Once the islanders understood the ramifications of mining the island, they (and the Orkney Islands Council) opposed the initiative unilaterally. Davies, who is English, was moved to write The Yellow Cake Revue after a public examiner's report advised the Secretary of State for Scotland to deny the SSEB's request to mine. The first interlude, "Farewell to Stromness", has become one of Davies' most popular pieces, and has been arranged for various instruments.

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