Vocal Music
- With a Voice of Singing – Martin Shaw (1874-1958)
- What Does the Lord Require? – arr. Michael Burkhardt (b. 1957)
- Be Thou My Vision – arr. Jason Tonioli (contemporary)
- Now Thank We All Our God, BWV 657 – J. S. Bach (1685-1750)
- Hymn 390 Praise to the Lord, the Almighty (Lobe den Herren)
- Hymn 605 What does the Lord require (Sharpthorne)
- Hymn 408 Sing praise to God who reigns above (Mit Freuden Zart)
- Hymn 488 Be thou my vision (Slane)
- Hymn 475 God himself is with us (Tysk)
- Psalm 113:1-2, 4-8 Laudate, pueri – Tone IVe
Martin Shaw |
Martin Shaw was a composer, educator, arranger and campaigner for renewal and revival of English church music during the early part of the 20th Century. In a career which spanned both World Wars, he felt: very strongly that
the great purpose of music should be to aid the cause of Humanity, and that we should regard it, therefore, as being in its nature at least as much social as artistic.
Michael Burkhardt |
I'm playing this setting of the hymn to help familiarize the congregation with the tune so we may sing it with confidence later in the service. This hymn is one of the great hymns of the last part of the 20th century. “What Does the Lord Require?” was written in January 1949 by Albert Bayly, considered by many as a father of the Twentieth-Century Hymn Explosion. The hymn was based on the text from Micah 6:6-8 and was published along with 16 other hymns representing prophets from the Old Testament. The tune mostly associated with Bayly’s hymn is this one, SHARPTHORNE.
The text’s shortness and simplicity are by design. In an article “Writing Hymns for Our Times,” Bayly once wrote that “hymns may deal with the most profound ideas, but unless these are expressed in the simplest and clearest possible way they can be nothing but words to many of those who sing them.”
Jason Tonioli |
The closing voluntary is Bach's setting Lobe den Herren, better known as Now Thank We All Our God. It is written in an imitative style, with the lower voices (alto line of the treble clef and the entire bass clef played by the left hand, with pedal part) forming sort of a fugal 'cloud' that the melody, played by the right hand on the trumpet stop, soars above. This is one of several treatments of this famous hymn that Bach composed during his church musician years. (He wasn't always a church musician. For a period of 6 years he was music director for the court at Köthen, where the prince was Calvinist and did not use elaborate music in his worship; accordingly, most of Bach's work from this period was secular.)
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