Friday, December 15, 2023

Music for the Third Sunday of Advent, Year B: December 17, 2023



OPENING VOLUNTARY O Come, O Come, Emmanuel
setting, Michael D. Costello

GATHERING HYMN Awake! Awake, and Greet the New Morn (Rejoice, Rejoice) ELW 242
Marty Haugen's first version of this song was as a Christmas hymn. In a year when his family decided not to give material gifts, he wrote it for his aunt.  As you might guess, the opening words were, "Rejoice, rejoice!"

Feeling there was already an adequate supply of Christmas hymns, he later changed its focus to Advent.

HYMN OF THE DAY O Lord, How Shall I Meet You (Wie soll ich dich empfangen) ELW 241
In today's gospel reading, a group of priests and Levites (sent from the Pharisees) confront John the Baptist. They want to know if he is the Messiah. He tells them he is not, but that he has been sent to prepare the way for someone greater than himself. 

It can seem strange when assemblies sing songs with "I" language. Of course we understand that we are singing of a shared experience and that "I" can really be a communal "we." But I appreciate that after three stanzas of "how shall meet you," "you came to set me free," and "Your thirst for my salvation set me free," the focus turns outward and we call upon the sad hearted to rejoice. The Lord's appearing isn't just for me, but for all. We call on all people to hail Christ's appearing and ask him to guide us safely home.

MUSICAL OFFERING Climb to the Top of the Highest Mountain
Carolyn Jennings
In this season of Advent, 3 of our readings from the Hebrew scriptures come from the book called Isaiah. While scholars believe this book may be a compilation of writings from at least three prophets, their message is unfied - God's people will be redeemed and comforted.

This musical offering is an echo of last week's reading from Isaiah 40. God will care for the people like a shepherd, carrying them in loving arms and keeping them safe from harm.
Not only is Mount Hermon the highest point in Israel, it's home to a ski resort!

COMMUNION HYMN As the Dark Awaits the Dawn (Lucent) ELW 261

SENDING HYMN Joy to the World (Antioch) ELW 267

CLOSING VOLUNTARY Fugue in E minor
J. S. Bach
The subject (opening theme) of this fugue resembles a trumpet call, earning it "The Night Watchman's Fugue" as a nickname. 
"Keep Awake!" is our constant Advent cry, something to ponder as we hear the music played.

We welcome Jane Daugherty to the organ bench for today's closing voluntary.



Sources: Hymnal Companion to Evangelical Lutheran Worship
Mount Hermon photo: By Almog - Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2181987


Friday, December 8, 2023

Music for the Second Sunday of Advent, Year B: December 10, 2023




OPENING VOLUNTARY Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming
arr. Sandra Eithun
St. Mark's Ringers

In this season of Advent, three of four readings from the Hebrew Scriptures are from the Book of Isaiah. Christians have long seen prophecies of Jesus in his writings. (I say "his," but many scholars believe this book is a compilation of writings from at least THREE "Isaiahs.") You'll find "Lo, How a Rose," in the Christmas section of Evangelical Lutheran Worship, but the line "Isaiah 'twas foretold it, this rose I have in mind. . ." makes it a suitable Advent hymn as well. (Yes, I used one of the more poetic versions of the text.)

Eithun's arrangement begins with the melody high in the handbell range. She augments (stretches) the rhythms, so the melody seems to hang suspended in time with an ethereal quality.

Our Three Kings recently enjoyed a loving makeover from member Darby Brown. They look amazing and sit a respectable distance from the creche.




GATHERING HYMN Prepare the Royal Highway 
(Bereden väg för Herran) ELW 264
Compare the text of this hymn to today's reading from the Hebrew Scriptures, especially Isaiah 40: 3-5. "Prepare the royal highway" is another way of saying "make straight in the desert a highway."

The second stanza looks forward to Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem, but stanzas three and four seem to be about the second coming when he comes to rule in "peace and freedom and justice, truth, and love."

HYMN OF THE DAY Comfort, Comfort Now My People 
(Freu dich sehr) ELW 256

MUSICAL OFFERING My Lord, What a Morning David von Kampen
See the text and tune at ELW 438
This classic African American spiritual and Advent hymn gives a vivid picture of the End Times, an important theme in the season of Advent. 
The gentle, almost gospel accompaniment with selected chords from the jazz genre is a suitable homage to the gospel style.
Interestingly, the stanzas that speak of the sinner's cry and the Christian's shout are notated to be sung softly by the arranger. Why? I can't be certain, but I think it's because the morning also comes with mourning. Christians should never take glee in the notion that someone perishes, whatever their sins may be. God certainly does not.

COMMUNION HYMN All Earth is Hopeful (Toda la tierra) ELW 266
When St. Francis photobombs your "We're having a baby" announcement.

SENDING HYMN Hark, the Glad Sound (Chesterfield)  ELW 239

CLOSING VOLUNTARY On Jordan's Bank the Baptist's Cry
(Puer nobis)
See the text and tune at ELW 249.

Friday, December 1, 2023

Music for the First Sunday of Advent, Year B: December 3, 2023



OPENING VOLUNTARY Comfort, Comfort Now My People
setting, Egil Hovland
Based on the hymntune Freu dich sehr, a light flute gives glimpses of the melody with lots of little flourishes. Another, darker flute, plays the melody. All this happens over a light pedal point - a bass note that sounds continuously throughout this dance-like chorale prelude.
It's a reminder that Advent is a time of joyful expectation, setting the tone not only for this service, but for the entire season.
See the text and tune at ELW 256.

GATHERING HYMN Fling Wide the Door (Macht hoch die Tür)
ELW 259
This hymn implores us to "Fling wide the door, unbar the gate. . ." But it isn't just a gate we open. We also open our hearts, not to receive salvation, but to welcome his rule. The feel of this hymn is both grand and celebratory with its image of the King of glory arriving in state.

In this Advent season of hope and expectation, the whole world awaits the coming of the Savior. We hear the words of the prophets. We sing of God's promises. We place our hope in God. The carols and hymns in this service draw from a variety of countries. Other parts of the service are based on passages from Isaiah. (Adapted from Sundays and Seasons)




Come Now, O Prince of Peace (ELW 247)
The text and music are by a Korean composer with an introduction and accompaniment by Anne Krentz Organ.

Comfort, Comfort Now My People
This is not the same text and tune as found in ELW. The text is a paraphrase of the Isaiah reading by Mark Sedio. He has paired the words with the exquisite Welsh tune Suo Gan. The comforting text and lilting melody give the hymn a lullaby quality.

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus (ELW 254)
Charles Wesley's text Advent text is paired with Jefferson, a tune that may have originated in the southern states of the USA. We only know it was first published in 1835 in a hymn collection titled Southern Harmony. It was part of the American "singing schools" tradition that found its beginning in colonial times.

Lost in the Night (sung by the Festival Choir)
setting, Kyle Haugen
Olav Lee, though credited with the text, is not the original author. Lee was born in Norway and arrived in the US in 1877. The original text was by Olga Maria Virginia Kullgren (1849 - 1909), a Swedish hymn writer. 

The tune is from Finland.

He Came Down (ELW 253)
This is a traditional song from Cameroon.

The Angel Gabriel from Heaven Came (ELW 265)
The Basque region gave us this carol of the annunciation. The Basque people share a common language, heritage, and culture even though parts of this region are in France and parts are in Spain.

Drawn to the Light (ELW 593)
This hymn and tune come from John C. Ylvisaker (1937-2017) who is probably best known for the hymn Borning Cry.
The tune La Crosse, is name for La Crosse, Wisconsin where the hymn was first sung in 1987 by the three groups who would later be known as Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.


MUSICAL OFFERING Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming
piano setting, John Carter

COMMUNION HYMN O Come, O Come, Emmanuel (Veni Emmanuel) ELW 257

SENDING HYMN O Come, Divine Messiah
This final hymn is not found in ELW. I learned it a few years ago while performing it with RareSong, an early music group that I sing with. We sang a concert of music that French and Spanish colonists might have sung on the first coast when Fort Caroline was established and the city of St. Augustine was founded. in published form, this French carol dates to at the least the 1600s.
Determined to add it to our modern repertoire, I was delighted to find that our Roman Catholic siblings in faith have been singing it all along!

RareSong

CLOSING VOLUNTARY Comfort, Comfort Now My People
This book-end rendering of Freu dich sehr couldn't be more different than the opening version. This setting is an exhuberant trumpet tune with full organ!






Music for the Fifth Sunday of Easter, Year B: April 28, 2024

OPENING VOLUNTARY Ubi caritas et amor  setting, Gerald Near It is the Holy Spirit's work to gather us together as God's people in a ...