Showing posts with label Ola Gjeilo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ola Gjeilo. Show all posts

Saturday, January 9, 2021

Music for January 10, 2021 + The Baptism of Our Lord

Vocal Music

  • Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence – William Roger Price (b. 1955)
    • Camryn Creech, soprano and Harrison Boyd, baritone
  • Hymn 297 Descend, O Spirit, purging flame (ERHALT UNS, HERR)

Instrumental Music

  • When Jesus went to Jordan’s Stream, BWV 684 and 685 – Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
  • Chorale – Ola Gielo (b. 1978)
  • Toccata in E, BWV 566 – Johann Sebastian Bach

This Sunday, the focus of the service is Jesus' baptism. Jesus goes to the River Jordan and is baptized by his cousin John (hereinafter known as "the Baptist," meaning his action, not denominational affiliation). Baptism offered a new beginning, and this was true of Jesus. Mark;s Gospel includes nothing of Jesus' life before his baptism, where Jesus went public and begins his ministry.
The Baptism of Christ Window 
at Good Shepherd

To mark that, I am playing two preludes by J. S. Bach based on the Lutheran hymn Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam (Hymn 139 in our hymnal, When Jesus went to Jordan's stream.) These two chorale preludes are found in the third volume of his Clavier-Übung, which means keyboard exercises, but in typical Bach fashion, they are really beautiful works of art. The first, BWV 684, is a four-part setting for two manuals and pedal; and the second, BWV 685, a setting for single manual with no pedal part. 

BWV 684 is a trio sonata with the melody in the tenor register of the pedal . Bach specifically stipulates two keyboards to give different sonorities to the imitative upper parts and the bass part. In the left hand you’ll hear an unceasing figure of flowing 16th notes which give the idea of the water flowing at the Jordan River, while the right hand motif depicts the descending of the Holy Spirit over Jesus Christ.

The manualiter chorale prelude BWV 685, despite being only 27 bars long and only in three-parts, is a complex composition with dense fugal writing. The subject and countersubject are both derived from the first line of the cantus firmus (the melody). The subject is presented three times as written, and three time inverted (or turned upside down.) Hermann Keller suggested that this represents the three immersions at baptism. Others have seen allusions to the Trinity in the three voices. The subject and countersubject have been seen as representing Luther's baptismal themes of Old Adam and New Man.

The closing voluntary, the Toccata in E Major, BWV 566, is the first of five sections of a larger organ work written by J. S. Bach when he was young. In 1703, when he was but 18, Bach was appointed organist at the New Church in Arnstadt. In 1705, he was granted a four week leave of absence to visit the organist and composer Dieterich Buxtehude in the northern city of Lübeck. The visit to Buxtehude involved a 280 mile journey each way, reportedly on foot. Four weeks turned into four months, which did NOT sit well with his employer. 

This work is probably from that period, for its compositional form resembles that of the preludes by Buxtehude. The first section alternates manual or pedal cadenzas with dense suspended chords.

Bach also wrote a transposed version of the piece in C major (BWV 566a), to play on organs tuned in meantone where E major would sound discordant due to the tuning of the organ (with a very sharp D♯). Modern organs or those tuned to a more equal temperament do not have this need.

Our offertory today is a setting of the hymn Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence, arranged by the Oklahoma composer and pianist, Roger Price. It is sung by our college students Camry Creech and Harrison Boyd, who are singing one last time before returning to their respective schools in Oklahoma (Camryn - Oklahoma City University) and Mississippi (Harrison - The University of Mississippi.)

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Music for August 2, 2020 + The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost

Vocal Music

  • En Prière– Gabriel Faure (1845-1924)

Instrumental Music

  • Hyfrydol – Gregg Sewell (b. 1953)
  • Chorale – Ola Gjeilo (b. 1978)

Congregational Music (all hymns from the Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “LR” which are from Lift Every Voice and Sing II.)

  • Hymn L146 - Break thou the bread of life (BREAD OF LIFE)
  • Song of Praise S-280 - Glory to God (Gloria in Excelsis) – Robert Powell (b. 1932)
Gabriel Fauré
This Sunday we get to hear one of our former (and returning) staff singers, Anna Zhang, who will offer a lovely sacred song by Gabriel Fauré,  one of the most influential of French composers, bridging the the Romantic period with the beginnings of the modern era in music.

His early training was for a life as a church organist. At age nine he was sent to the École de Musique Classique et Religieuse (School of Classical and Religious Music), which Louis Niedermeyer was setting up in Paris. There he stayed for 11 years, training to become a church musician. Although he played the organ professionally for over four decades, his real strength lay in composition. His Requiem and Pavane remain among the best-loved classical pieces.

Fauré is regarded as one of the masters of the French art song, or mélodie. Maurice Ravel wrote in 1922 that Fauré had saved French music from the dominance of the German Lied. Today's solo is a great example of that. En Prière, or In Prayer, is a beautifully poetic song written in 1890 and based on the text of a devotional poem by Stéphan Bordèse. Stylistically and textually, En Prière is a musical glimpse into the prayer of a sincere believer. The delicate yet intense melodic line is supported, even sheltered, by the piano’s repetitive triplets.

Pianist Graham Johnson had this to say about the piece:
The creation of an atmosphere of heartfelt piety seems effortless, the progression of harmonies a miracle of fluidity. Only Fauré could have written this music. At ‘Révélez-Vous à moi’ the triplet accompaniment cedes to a motif of crotchets which wafts across the stave as if the Holy Spirit revealed; on the song’s last page this alternates in an almost liturgical manner with triplets, and is repeated no fewer than five times, as if in benediction.
from notes by Graham Johnson © 2005
The piano voluntary is a beautiful, meditative piece by the Norwegian composer, Ola Gjeilo, one of the bright "Northern Lights" in the modern musical atmosphere. This piece is taken from a recording of piano improvisations recorded in 2012.