Showing posts with label David Cherwien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Cherwien. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Music for April 3, 2022 + The Fifth Sunday in Lent

Vocal Music

  • Wash Me Throughly – David Halls (b. 1963)

Instrumental Music

  • Jesus, I Will Ponder Now – Robert Below (1934-2021)
  • Wenn Wir In Höchstein Nöten Sein – J. S. Bach (1685-1750)
    • When we are in utmost need
  • Toccata on “In the Cross of Christ I Glory” – David Cherwien (b. 1957)

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

  • Hymn 398 - I sing the almighty power of God (FOREST GREEN)
  • Hymn 441 - In the cross of Christ I glory (RATHBUN)
  • Hymn 476 - Glory be to Jesus (WEM IN LEIDENSTAGEN)
  • Hymn 610 - Lord, whose love through humble service (BLAENHAFREN)
  • Psalm 126 – Tone IIa
In 1888, the eccentric French composer Erik Satie (1866-1925) published three short, atmospheric piano solos called Gymnopédies. The first, marked Lent et douloureux (“slowly with pain/grief”), is perhaps one of the most famous piano solos penned during the late Romantic era. (You can listen to it here - just NOT during church!) Gymnopédie No. 1 is a simple piece, and that’s where the beauty comes from. The melody is a single, flowing line of quarter notes, raising and lowering like ocean waves. The rhythms are long and sustained, creating a sense of floating through time.

The piece begins with two alternating chords: Gmaj7 (G-B-D-F#) and Dmaj7 (D-F#-A-C#). The melody floats over these two chords, slowly raising and lowering and expanding in dynamics.

I tell you all this because in the anthem this week, composer David Halls has written what could be a companion composition for choir, using the penitential Psalm 51.
Wash me thoroughly from my wickedness, and forgive me all my sin.
For I acknowledge my faults, and my sin is ever before me. (Psalm 51:2-3)

This simple piece begins not with two alternating chords, but with a four bar chordal progression over two alternating bass notes, D and A. The single melody line enters over this basso ostinato in much the same way as the melody in the Satie piece. The tempo never varies, never hurries, just moves gracefully and peacefully along. After the first line of the Psalm text is repeated (the only difference from the first time is that the lower choir voices add a harmonic line), we move to a new section of music, where the upper choir voices (sopranos and tenors) present a new melodic line which is then echoed by the altos and basses. All four voices join together to proclaim "my sin is ever before me." Then the first section is repeated almost note for note.

David Halls is the Director of Music at Salisbury Cathedral.  Whilst a pupil at Harrogate Grammar School, he was Assistant Organist at St Wilfrid’s, Harrogate, and studied the organ with Adrian Selway at St Peter’s Church, Harrogate, Ronald Perrin at Ripon Cathedral and later with Thomas Trotter in London. In addition to his daily duties in the cathedral, David has toured Austria, Estonia, France, Holland, Italy, Latvia, Sweden and the USA with the Cathedral Choir and has appeared as conductor, accompanist and soloist in many concerts and recordings. In demand as a recitalist in cathedrals and churches throughout the UK, he has recorded two solo CDs and a DVD on the Willis Organ in Salisbury Cathedral. He is active as a composer with many choral and organ works published in the UK and USA.

The opening voluntary is a chorale prelude on Jesus, I Will Ponder Now (JESU KREUZ, LEIDEN UND PEIN), a hymn that is quite popular in Lutheran churches but not many other places. The tune was written in the late 16th Century, then paired with a 17th century text. This organ arrangement was composed in the early 21st century by Robert Below, a piano professor at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. He taught in their Conservatory of Music for 32 years before retiring in 1996. Known as a prolific performer and composer, His numerous anthems, hymns, and other sacred works were used at his beloved All Saints Episcopal Church in Appleton.

The communion voluntary is the beautiful chorale prelude from Bach's collection, Orgelbüchlein.  Bach wrote “Wenn wir in höchsten Nöten sein,” BWV 641, when he was in his thirties. It's a tender and delicate ornamented chorale. Here’s the first phrase of the original melody:
And here’s that phrase as it practically disappears under Bach’s fanciful ornamentation:

There’s an obvious motivation for writing an ornamented melody line here. The chorale text begins, “Wenn wir in höchsten Nöten sein, / Und wissen nicht, wo aus noch ein” (When we are in utmost need, and are completely at a loss). So the profuse ornamentation, and the way it disguises the tune, may represent uncertainty or restlessness.



Thursday, February 3, 2022

Music for February 6, 2022 + The Fifth Sunday after Epiphany

Vocal Music

  • Day by Day – Martin How (b. 1931)

Instrumental Music

  • Meditation on “How Bright Appears the Morning Star” – David Bednall (b. 1979)
  • Von Gott will ich nicht lassen [I will not forsake the Lord], BWV 658 – Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
  • Wie Schön Leuchtet – David Cherwein (b. 1957)

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

  • Hymn 362 - Holy, holy, holy! Lord God Almighty (NICEA)
  • Hymn R269 - Let all that is within me (Melvin Harrell)
  • Hymn - Santo, santo, santo (Unknown)
  • Hymn R149 - I, the Lord of sea and sky (HERE I AM, LORD)
  • Hymn 537 - Christ for the world we sing (MOSCOW)
  • Psalm 138 – Tone Va
The anthem today is a setting of the prayer by Richard of Chichester, the 13th century bishop and saint, who wrote the prayer
Thanks be to thee, our Lord Jesus Christ,
for all the benefits which thou hast given us,
for all the pains and insults which thou hast borne for us.
O most merciful Redeemer, Friend, and Brother,
may we know thee more clearly,
love thee more dearly,
and follow thee more nearly. Amen.
The prayer has been a hymn in the Episcopal church since its inclusion in The Hymnal 1940, though it's greater popularity has come from it's inclusion in the Broadway musical Godspell. Alas, the tune we are singing today is neither from the hymnal nor the musical, but a 1978 setting by Scottish-born organist Martin How. 

Martin How
The son of John How, a former Bishop of Glasgow and Galloway and the Primus of Scotland, Martin spent most of his career with the Royal School of Church Music where he was known principally as a choir trainer specializing in the training and motivation of young singers. In this capacity he initiated and developed the RSCM Chorister Training Scheme which has since been used in various forms in many parts of the world. He also inaugurated the RSCM Southern Cathedral Singers, a group which has broadcast frequently on BBC Radio's Choral Evensong from Canterbury Cathedral and elsewhere. He was awarded the MBE for 'Services to Church Music' in the 1993 New Years Honours List. 

Since his retirement from the RSCM he has returned to organ playing as an honorary member of the music staff at Croydon Minster.

David Bednall
The opening and closing voluntary are both based on the same hymn, the German chorale Wie Schön Leuchtet, which is found in our hymnal as hymn 496, “How Bright Appears the Morning Star” In the opening voluntary, David Bednall has given it a rather mystical treatment, with a slow, flowing triplet pattern accompanying a slow presentation of the cantus firmus. (Latin for "fixed melody", used to designate a pre-existing melody.)

English organist David Bednall is one of the leading choral composers of his generation. He is a Teaching Fellow and Organist of The University of Bristol, Sub Organist at Bristol Cathedral and Director of The University Singers. David Bednall has been Organ Scholar at The Queen's College, Oxford and at Gloucester Cathedral where he also served as Acting Director of Music and Acting Assistant Organist and served Wells Cathedral as assistant organist.

David Cherwien
The closing voluntary is a brilliant toccata on the same tune by the American organist David Cherwien.  Cherwien is currently serving as Cantor at Mt. Olive Lutheran Church, Minneapolis, MN, and in 2002 was appointed Artistic Director for the National Lutheran Choir, also based in the Twin Cities. He is a prolific composer with over 150 publications of choral and organ music, with several publishers including MorningStar Music, and is the 2007 winner of the Raabe Prize for Excellence in Sacred Composition for his piece, "The Souls of the Righteous."
The organ voluntary at Communion comes from J. S. Bach's great collection of 18 Chorale Preludes. The choral Von Gott will ich nicht lassen (I will not forsake God), BWV 658, set in the rare key of F minor (associated with tenderness and tranquility), harnesses with child-like innocence the Christian image of God. Bach sets the melody in the tenor voice (played in the pedal) sounding from within the flowing legato texture in the hands