Rally Day
Vocal Music
- Laudate Dominum – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791), Marion Russell Dixon, soprano
Instrumental Music
- Galliard on “Gather Us In” – James Biery (b. 1956)
- Come Sunday – Duke Ellington (1899-1971), arr. Craig Curry
- Toccata on “Gather Us In” – Donald M. VerKuilen III (b. 1994)
Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)
- Hymn 8 - Morning has broken (BUNESSAN)
- Hymn 523 - Glorious things of thee are spoken (ABBOTT’S LEIGH)
- Hymn 493 - O for a thousand tongues to sing (AZMON)
- Hymn 297 - Descend, O Spirit, purging flame (ERHALT UNS, HERR)
- Hymn 304 - I come with joy to meet my Lord (LAND OF REST)
- Hymn 685 - Rock of Ages (TOPLADY)
- Hymn R 149 - I, the Lord of sea and sky (HERE I AM, LORD)
- Psalm 71:1-6 - Tone VIIIa
So, naturally, when planning the music for this Sunday, the day we call “Rally Day,” I would normally look at music of a more upbeat, celebratory nature. This is true of the organ voluntaries, and many of the hymns we will sing this Sunday.
Marion Russell Dickson |
I thought the contemporary hymn ,"Gather Us In (hymn 14 in Renew), would be a great hymn for Rally Day. We don't know it (yet) as a congregational hymn, so I have found two organ pieces based on this American hymn to "frame" our worship service.
The opening voluntary is a galliard (a lively dance in triple time) by the Michigan organist James Biery. Biery is Minister of Music at Grosse Pointe Memorial Church (Presbyterian) in Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, where he directs the choirs, plays the organ, and oversees the music program of the church. Prior to this appointment Biery was music director for Cathedrals in St. Paul, Minnesota and Hartford, Connecticut.
The closing voluntary is another setting of the hymn "Gather Us In, by the young composer Donald VerKuilen III. This is a toccata which was one of the winners of the 2016 American Guild of Organists New Music Competition, which was premiered here in Houston. A native of Appleton Wisconsin, VerKuilen is a graduate of The Oberlin Conservatory. He has studied performance and improvisation with Marie-Louise Langlais, former professor at The Conservatoire de Paris and widow of the famed organist Jean Langlais. VerKuilen currently serves as Director of Music at Saint Rocco Catholic Church in Cleveland, Ohio.
The communion voluntary is a piano arrangement of Duke Ellington's song, "Come Sunday." Originally part of his instrumental jazz suite Black, Brown and Beige (1943), a musical history of African Americans, Ellington added text to this instrumental theme in 1958 and the song became a standard at his sacred jazz concerts.
I thought of this piece while reading the Gospel for this Sunday. Jesus heals a woman on the Sabbath, and is criticized. Jesus answered his critics, "...ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage on the sabbath day?”
African American scholar William McClain notes the importance of Sunday to African Americans, even in secular music: “To the Christian Sunday is, or should be, another Easter, in which God’s victory in Christ over sin and death are celebrated in work, word, song, prayer, and preaching. After all, even [slave] masters and owners tried to be more human on Sunday.” [1]
The song is ultimately about the providence of God in all our lives. The refrain addresses God directly, “Lord, dear Lord above, God Almighty, God of love,” and then makes a petition, “please look down and see my people through.” The stanzas point to hope and heaven, concluding that “With God’s blessing we can make it through eternity.”
Duke Ellington |
I thought of this piece while reading the Gospel for this Sunday. Jesus heals a woman on the Sabbath, and is criticized. Jesus answered his critics, "...ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage on the sabbath day?”
African American scholar William McClain notes the importance of Sunday to African Americans, even in secular music: “To the Christian Sunday is, or should be, another Easter, in which God’s victory in Christ over sin and death are celebrated in work, word, song, prayer, and preaching. After all, even [slave] masters and owners tried to be more human on Sunday.” [1]
The song is ultimately about the providence of God in all our lives. The refrain addresses God directly, “Lord, dear Lord above, God Almighty, God of love,” and then makes a petition, “please look down and see my people through.” The stanzas point to hope and heaven, concluding that “With God’s blessing we can make it through eternity.”
Lord, dear Lord above, God almighty,
God of love, please look down and see my people through.
I believe that God put sun and moon up in the sky.
I don't mind the gray skies
'cause they're just clouds passing by.
Heaven is a goodness time.
A brighter light on high.
Do unto others as you would have them do to you.
And have a brighter by and by.
Lord, dear Lord above, God almighty,
God of love, please look down and see my people through.
[1] Hawn, C. Michael, History of Hymns: “Come Sunday” reflects Duke Ellington’s faith & sacred jazz tradition retrieved August 22, 2019 (https://www.umcdiscipleship.org/resources/history-of-hymns-come-sunday-reflects)
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