Thursday, June 14, 2018

Music for Sunday, June 17, 2018

Vocal Music

  • Let There Be Peace on Earth – Mark Hayes (b. 1953), arr., Bruce Bailey, soloist

Instrumental Music

  • Our Father in Heaven – Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767)
  • Adagio from Fantasie in C – César Franck (1822-1890)
  • Jubilee March – R. M. Stults (1861-1933)

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

  • Hymn 525 - The Church’s one foundation (AURELIA)
  • Hymn 558 - Faith of our fathers (ST. CATHERINE)
  • Hymn R250 - O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder (O STOR GUD)
  • Hymn 657 - Love divine, all loves excelling (HYFRYDOL)
  • Psalm 92 - Bonum est confiteri
This Sunday Bruce Bailey is singing the song Let There Be Peace On Earth, written in 1955 by the husband/wife team of Jill Jackson Miller and Sy Miller in 1955. It was initially written for the International Children's Choir of Long Beach, California, and is still their theme song.

This beautiful arrangement by the contemporary pianist Mark Hayes uses the updated lyrics which change the gender specific terms Father/He/Brother to gender neutral terms (where "father" is replaced with "creator", and "brother" is replaced with "family" or "each other"), The gender-neutral lyrics have been copyrighted by the original licensing agent of the song. 

You can read the lyrics and a brief history of the song by checking out the History of Hymns blog written by Michael Hawn, retired as professor of sacred music at Perkins School of Theology, SMU, in Dallas.


The communion voluntary is an excerpt from a large-scale organ work by the Belgian/French composer César Franck. The work, the Fantasy in C Major, is in three large parts separated by short transitional passages. I'm playing the last section, Adagio, for communion. 

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. 

I've talked before about my humble beginnings as organist at my home church, First United Methodist Church, in Tiptonville, Tennessee. I grew up across the street from the church, and spent many an hour roaming through the unlocked building. (Can you imagine letting youth have free access today, unsupervised in a public building?) 

I was always fascinated by the 1924 Möller pipe organ and the stacks of old music stashed on the floor of the choir room closet. Much of it was music purchased when the organ was new. One piece that caught my interest was a single page out of "The Organist" Magazine from 1928. It was the Jubilee March by R. M. Stults, an American composer of popular music in the late 19th century and early 20th century whose most popular work, The Sweetest Story Ever Told, was still popular for weddings into the middle of the 20th century. 

At the time it was built, our church was one of the larger public buildings in Tiptonville, and host to the local high school assemblies. Mae Peacock was organist at First Methodist at the time, and wrote in pencil at the top of the page, "T.H.S. graduation 1933."  The second half of the piece is missing, so several years ago I wrote a "B" section to extend the march, returning to the original to end the piece. 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.