Vocal Music
- Give Me Jesus – Mark Hayes (b. 1953), Mitchell Hutchins, tenor
- Jubilation 2: Variant on “Every time I Hear the Spirit"– Dennis Janzer (b. 1954)
- Aria – John S. Dixon (b. 1957)
- Postlude in C Minor – George Blake (1912-1986)
- Hymn 390 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty (Lobe den Herren)
- Hymn 660 O Master, let me walk with thee (Maryton)
- Hymn R266 Give thanks with a grateful heart (Give Thanks)
- Hymn 602 Jesu, Jesu, fill us with your love (Chereponi)
- Hymn 609 Where cross the crowded ways of life (Gardiner)
- Chant-based (Medieval c.1150 - c.1400)
- Renaissance (c.1400 - c.1600)
- Baroque (c.1600 - c.1750)
- Classical (c.1750 - c.1830)
- Early Romantic (c.1830 - c.1860)
- Late Romantic (c.1860 - c.1920)
- Modern (1920 - present)
- Hymn-based
- Spiritual and folk based
- Contemporary (anything in the style of music from the 60's to the present)
- Traditional (anything that doesn't fit squarely in the last four categories.)
Mark Hayes |
This Sunday, however, we get to hear one of his arrangements when Mitchell Hutchins sings his arrangement of the spiritual, "Give Me Jesus." Mitchell was a choral scholar here at Good Shepherd back when he was a student at Lone Star Kingwood. He has since moved on to Stephen F. Austin to study Music Education, and sings in the choir at First Presbyterian Church, Kingwood. He's a favorite among many here at Good Shepherd, and you will love hearing him sing this setting of the familiar spiritual.
Two of the organ pieces are by composers who attended the recent convention of the American Guild of Organists held here in Houston (I was chair of Hospitality for this national meeting that brought more than 1200 organists from all over the globe to our city.) The first is the opening voluntary, a "jubilation" on the spiritual, Every Time I Feel the Spirit. It is a bright, rollicking little piece (only lasting 1'30") that reminds me of a Bach Invention. (The Inventions are a collection of short pieces J. S. Bach wrote for pedagogical purposes. These fifteen two-part works, each named 'inventio', along with fifteen three-part pieces, named 'sinfonia', were written as technical exercises for the independence of two hands, but are also beautiful works of art.) This piece by Dennis Janzer, organist-choir master at St. Mary's Episcopal Cathedral in Memphis, is also written in just two parts, requiring an independance between the left and right hand.
The other piece is a lovely Aria by an John Dixon, an Englishman with an MBA from Harvard who is now the organist and composer-in-residence at a Presbyterian Church in Virginia Beach.
The closing voluntary is by a little known organist from New Jersey, George Blake. In 1926, at age fourteen, Blake began to play the theater organ professionally at the Franklin Theatre in Nutley, New Jersey. His father having died when he was very young, Blake quickly became the primary supporter of his family through his performing, and he lived with his mother in New Jersey for many years until her death. His younger brother was the cartoonist Bud Blake (of the popular comic strip "Tiger.") George Blake served as principal organist for a number of theaters in New Jersey and New York City, including the New Roxy (later the Center Theatre) in Rockefeller Center. He was also a regular performer on several radio programs of the day, including the "Lucky Strike Hour." As the age of the cinema organist ended, Blake focused primarily on sacred music. He was organist at several churches in New Jersey including St. Andrew's Episcopal (South Orange) and Grace Episcopal (Nutley).
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