What did you sing at church today?

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  • A Ceremony of Carols is one of my favourites, too. I may have linked to this before, but here it is, sung last year by some of the girl choristers of Uppsala Cathedral, Sweden:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luAO_nqOrVU

    One of the Cathedral clergy interpolates some short readings and prayers, turning this into more of an act of worship, rather than a performance, IYSWIM.

    Meanwhile, Advent 2 at Our Place tomorrow:

    The advent of our King (Franconia or - preferably! - St Thomas)
    On Jordan's bank the Baptist's cry (Winchester New)
    Love divine, all loves excelling (Love Divine or - preferably! - Blaenwern)
    Hark, the glad sound! (Bristol)


  • March HareMarch Hare Shipmate Posts: 18
    A new Priest in Charge being licensed tomorrow, so looking forward to a really good sing.
    1 Praise, my Soul!
    2 Wele'n sefyll rhwng y myrtwydd (by Ann Griffiths, to Cwm Rhondda)
    3 Tydi a wnaeth y wyrth, O Grist, Fab Duw (Pantyfedwen; than which there is no more inspiring hymn/tune combination)
    4 Lo! He comes (because Advent, and hoping everyone realises it does not refer to the new priest, but someone even more worthy!)
  • Advent 2, but also Hebrews 10:1-18 The Ultimate Sacrifice

    Lo, He Comes With Clouds Descending (Helmsley)
    It is well with my soul (Ville du Havre)
    Saviour, Thy Dying Love (Something for Jesus)
    Before The Throne Of God Above (Townend)
  • "A little child shall lead them".
    “Hark, the glad sound!” - Bristol.
    “Like a candle flame” (Kendrick).
    “See in yonder manger low” - Humility.
    “We await the Peaceful Kingdom” - Salley Garden.
    “The King shall come when morning dawns” - Richmond.


  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    Advent 2, and our first Sunday in the month "Hymns of Praise" service.
    Hail, to the Lord's Anointed - CRÜGER
    Come, Thou long expected Jesus - CROSS OF JESUS
    *Eternal Father! Strong to Save - MELITA
    There is a hope that burns within my heart - own tune (Townend / Edwards)
    Lo! He Comes with Clouds Descending - HELMSLEY

    * Chosen by one of the congregation in memory of an uncle who was among 600 people killed when his Royal Navy ship entered an uncharted minefield during WW2
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Heron wrote: »
    ... (@piglet having googled scottish voices twice - the first time getting the wrong choir, the second time getting yours - The Algorithm is now showing me an advert for the SV MD vacancy on my facebook feed!)
    Indeed; sadly our MD has decided to retire in the spring, so we're looking for a new one. :(

    Our offerings at St Pete's were mostly quite happily seasonal:

    On Jordan's bank the Baptist's cry* - Winchester New
    People look east - Carol of the Advent
    How lovely on the mountains - Our God Reigns
    Wait for the Lord - Taize
    Onward, Christian pilgrims** - St Gertrude

    * during which I resisted all temptation to sing:

    On Jordan's bank, the Baptists cry
    If I were a Baptist, so would I
    They drink no beer, they have no fun
    I'm glad that I'm an Anglican!


    ** WHY??? At least it's a decent tune, but with so many wonderful Advent hymns and carols, I don't see any reason for having it just now. Also, completely bollocksed up words.



  • *sigh*

    Onward, Christian pilgrims is NOT a bollocksed-up version of Onward, Christian soldiers - it is a completely different hymn, using the same tune.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    I can’t list today’s hymns as we didn’t get a list and I have forgotten them. In any case, the organist changed the tunes to two of them without warning.
    Mass of St Thomas, but the visiting priest insisted that we said the Gloria. Being Advent, we had sung the Kyries, but he wasn’t satisfied.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited December 7
    Hmm. It's not compulsory to omit the Gloria during Advent, but it's a common practice which serves to underline the slightly austere liturgical nature of the season.

    Changing the tunes without warning Is Outrage!
    :angry:
  • *sigh*

    Onward, Christian pilgrims is NOT a bollocksed-up version of Onward, Christian soldiers - it is a completely different hymn, using the same tune.
    Perhaps it’s best described as an alternative text to “Onward, Christian Soldiers.”
    Today, we had:

    “We Return” (as described last week)
    “Comfort, Comfort Now My People”/GENEVAN 42
    “Come Now, O Prince of Peace”/O-SO-SO
    “Prepare the Way, O Zion”/BEREDEN VÄG FÖR HERREN


    All in all, quite satisfactory, especially as we had brass on “Comfort, Comfort Now My People” and “Prepare the Way, O Zion.”


  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    *sigh*

    Onward, Christian pilgrims is NOT a bollocksed-up version of Onward, Christian soldiers - it is a completely different hymn, using the same tune.
    I know, but it doesn't stop me wanting to sing the original words! :naughty:
    As it's the first Sunday of the month, we had Evensong:

    Usual chants for the Mag & Nunc
    Psalm 25 (extract) - Edwards

    and some quite decent hymns:

    Lo, he comes with clouds descending - Helmsley
    My God, accept my heart this day - Belmont
    O come, O come, Emmanuel - Veni Emmanuel

    The gentleman who was doing the Intercessions read the Litany from the 1929 Prayer Book, which evoked nice memories of singing it in procession round the Cathedral in St John's on the second Sunday in Advent and second Sunday in Lent. :heart:
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    They had On Jordan's Bank on the radio yesterday morning and I always want to sing those words as well, @Piglet .

    We had:

    I'll praise in the valley, praise on the mountain
    I raise a hallelujah
    Alone in my sorrow and dead in my sin
    Grand earth has quaked before, moved by the sound of his voice
    We stand and lift up our hands
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    We sang
    Ready the way - Curtis Stephan
    There is a longing - Anne Quigley
    Advent Communion Song - Bernadette Farrell
    A voice cries out in the wilderness - Joncas
    Plus the psalm, gospel acclamation and eucharistic acclamations as always.
  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    Late to the party this week.

    Advent 2 Parish Communion

    The advent of our king (Franconia)
    Murray Mass setting minus Gloria
    Let all mortal flesh (Picardy)
    Advent Prose ... rather nicely sung by male voices
    When came in flesh the incarnate word (Beatitudo)

    Quite a good service even if I was denied playing 'St Thomas' as they wanted the dull 'Franconia'. The last hymn (EH 13) I have not come across in decades and never to that highly unsuitable tune with its whooping and scooping 😩

    In the evening a trip to a very high church for "Solemn Mass of the Immaculate Comception" which appeared to use the RC rite in its entirety! Odd that Anglicans want to say "Leo our Pope" when he isn't 🤔

    Ye who own the faith of Jesus (Daily Daily)
    Kyrie to "St Philip" so dreary beyond ...
    Gloria was Glory in the highest (NEH 363) to Camberwell so very nice
    Magnificat instead of a Psalm (sung to plainchant)
    Alleluia was (I think) a modern RC one but cannot recall the name
    Metrical Creed to Abbots Leigh
    Holy light on earth's horizon (Blaenwern) which was new to me and had very fanciful verbal imagery 😳
    Sanctus and Agnus were a metrical version sung to Halton Holgate
    Holy virgin by God's decree
    Procession at the end to a garish statue singing "Immaculate Mary" to the Lourdes tune complete with references to "our father in Rome" and those in "heresy"s way" 🤣 and then that awful Hail holy queen 'hymn' from Whoopi Goldberg. I do detest that in church to say nothing of the extreme words 😡

    Anyway the sparse congregation were in good voice and seemed to enjoy it all. I find these sort of services eccentric to say the least but the ultra high church do usually lay on good food and alcohol so worth enduring 😂
  • After that lot, you'd be in the need for alcohol...
    :naughty:
  • Truron wrote: »
    Procession at the end to a garish statue singing ...
    You have a singing statue? (I know that's not what you meant!).

  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    @Baptist Trainfan 😂😂 yes that was badly phrased!

    @Bishops Finger the alcohol was more than welcome as any little tricks your FinC gets up to would be mild compared with this 🤣 Mind you at least no rose petals this time, just Granny's lace (to quote the late Pope F) draped over the image!
  • FInC does rose petals, but only at Corpus Christi, and we don't dress up our dollies images.

    We have a lace alb made from Granny's tablecloth, but I don't think he's ever worn it - he's a very tall chap, and it would be too short for him...
    :lol:
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    I can't abide lace on vestments. Even worse when several are wearing it and it doesn't match. It reminds me of one of those table cloth stalls at a jumble sale.
    I asked our deacon if he was going to be pretty in pink next Sunday, and got a very old-fashioned look. Luckily our place has never had "rose" vestments.
  • Advent 3 (aka Gaudete Sunday) is coming up at Our Place, and our rather lovely rose-pink chasuble will get its second outing this year:

    Come, thou long expected Jesus (Cross Of Jesus or preferably Halton Holgate)
    Hail to the Lord's anointed (Crueger)
    Lo! he comes with clouds descending (Helmsley)
    Hark, the glad sound (Bristol)

    I'm not sure if the list is correct, as they had Hark, the glad sound last Sunday...and I think some of the others are 'repeats'.

    However, they may be anticipating a low attendance at the 1030 Mass, as everyone is being encouraged to come to the 'CHRISTmass' Carol Service at 3pm, and then to stay on for the 'CHRISTmass' Fair at 4pm.
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    we have the best English anthem of all time tomorrow, complete with an alto solo

    I'm not in the choir tomorrow - just scholars - will report with delight midday tomorrow!
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Heron wrote: »
    we have the best English anthem of all time tomorrow, complete with an alto solo

    I'm not in the choir tomorrow - just scholars - will report with delight midday tomorrow!

    A bit of Gibbons?
  • Alan29 wrote: »
    Heron wrote: »
    we have the best English anthem of all time tomorrow, complete with an alto solo

    I'm not in the choir tomorrow - just scholars - will report with delight midday tomorrow!

    A bit of Gibbons?

    I'm sure you're right.
    :wink:
  • I suspect that it very well might be!
  • No! I mean Yes !
    :naughty:
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    @Heron - envious, moi? Too bloody right I am! :mrgreen:
    I'm just back from a Scottish Voices gig - an Advent service in Perth Cathedral, and it was an absolute cracker:

    Organ music: Praeludium on "Veni, veni Emmanuel" - Leo Sowerby

    Choir pieces:
    Matin Responsory - Palestrina
    O radiant dawn - MacMillan
    Adam lay y-bounden - Ord
    This is the truth from above - trad, arr. Vaughan Williams
    Jesus Christ the apple tree - Poston
    Alma redemptoris mater - Palestrina
    Angelus ad virginem - trad, arr. Keith Roberts
    People look east - trad, arr. Barry Rose

    Hymns:
    O come, O come, Emmanuel - Veni Emmanuel, arr. Willcocks
    Hark the glad sound - Bristol
    Hark! a herald voice is calling - Merton
    The voice of God goes out to all the world - Morestead
    Lo! he comes with clouds descending - Helmsley

    Organ voluntary: Fantasia on Veni Emmanuel - Alec Rowley

    Advent really is my favourite time of year. :heart:


  • Finally out of Hebrews (for a few weeks) Luke 2:4-14 as the text - theme of "Joy"

    O Come All ye Faithful (Adeste Fidelis)
    While Shepherds Watched (Winchester Old)
    Angels from the Realms of Glory (Woodford Green)
    Joy to the World (Antioch)
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    I suspect that it very well might be!

    It is a Desert Island Disk for me. Such poise and balance. It was always a special thing when I sang in choirs.
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    It would be great if you could name the piece you're referring to, please, for the benefit of those of us less conversant with church music.
    No! I mean Yes !
    :naughty:

    And if that's a joke I'm afraid I don't understand it :disappointed: .

  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    At 9 o'clock communion:
    O come, O come, Emmanuel - VENI EMMANUEL
    Before the Throne of God Above - own tune
    Joy to the World - ANTIOCH
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    ..on a flyer...

    Darke in E
    This is the record of John: Gibbons

    On Jordan's bank
    Hark the glad sound
    O child of promise come!
    Make way make way

    Well done those who got it right

    Heron

    @Piglet I'm jealous of you the Macmillan O radiant dawn is sublime.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Nenya wrote: »
    It would be great if you could name the piece you're referring to, please, for the benefit of those of us less conversant with church music.
    No! I mean Yes !
    :naughty:

    And if that's a joke I'm afraid I don't understand it :disappointed: .

    This is the record of John by Orlando Gibbons. I small masterpece.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9pE5vrgBHQ&list=RDa9pE5vrgBHQ&start_radio=1
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    We started with Jubilate everybody, and ended with You shall go out with joy. Both Jewish tunes which coincided nicely (and accidentally) with the start of Hanukkah. Mass was followed by Irish coffees and mince pies at the back of church, the selling of raffle tickets for the Sudan baby feeding appeal, and the kiddies practising their dance and procession for the childrens' Christmas Eve Mass.
    Gaudete Sunday indeed!
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    Nenya wrote: »
    It would be great if you could name the piece you're referring to, please, for the benefit of those of us less conversant with church music.
    No! I mean Yes !
    :naughty:

    And if that's a joke I'm afraid I don't understand it :disappointed: .

    @Nenya

    I started it. Sorry.

    'This is the record of John' by Orlando Gibbons has the reputation as The Best English Anthem Ever. The text is John 1:19-23, and asks 'art thou the prophet, and he answered 'no''.

    @Bishops Finger was being playful with the emphatic 'no' of the text/score.

    The expository solo lights up advent. And is to be much desired of singers

    I'll offer a linky that might assuage your disappointment.

    Heron







  • Thank you @Heron.
    :smile:

    My Apollo Gees to @Nenya for perpetuating the joke...
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Having finally succumbed to the lurgy that's going round, I decided to give church a miss today. If I hadn't, I'd have sung:

    Hail to the Lord's anointed - Crüger
    Restore, O Lord - Kendrick
    The angel Gabriel from heaven came - Birjina Gaztettobat Zegoen
    Only by grace can we enter
    The Lord will come and not be slow - St Stephen

    I can't say I'm heartbroken at having missed that, although I'm quite partial to the Angel Gabriel, and resisting any temptation to mention highly flavoured gravy ... :mrgreen:
  • Visiting a friend's church that still uses the old Book of Praise (PCCanada) we sang Child in the Manger (amongst others) this morning. That is the only Christmas song I need. Some of the others are good, but that is enough.
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    Piglet wrote: »
    Having finally succumbed to the lurgy that's going round, I decided to give church a miss today. If I hadn't, I'd have sung:

    Hail to the Lord's anointed - Crüger
    Restore, O Lord - Kendrick
    The angel Gabriel from heaven came - Birjina Gaztettobat Zegoen
    Only by grace can we enter
    The Lord will come and not be slow - St Stephen

    I can't say I'm heartbroken at having missed that, although I'm quite partial to the Angel Gabriel, and resisting any temptation to mention highly flavoured gravy ... :mrgreen:

    I have a colleague who is from the basque region - a muslim - who says that if we sing the angel gabriel in the original basque, then they will start coming to church.

    Hasn't happened yet. Pretty sure we would ruin it...

    Get well soon - I suspect choirs across the country will be depleted this Christmas with everyone going down with bugs.

    Heron
  • Singing in a Finno-Ugric language, especially in the absence of a native speaker, is not something I would ever personally do.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    .
    Singing in a Finno-Ugric language, especially in the absence of a native speaker, is not something I would ever personally do.

    Point of order - Basque is not Finno-Ugric - it's a language isolate with no known related languages.
  • Visiting a friend's church that still uses the old Book of Praise (PCCanada) we sang Child in the Manger (amongst others) this morning. That is the only Christmas song I need. Some of the others are good, but that is enough.

    If that's the one usually sung to the tune Bunessan, then I agree.
  • KarlLB wrote: »
    .
    Singing in a Finno-Ugric language, especially in the absence of a native speaker, is not something I would ever personally do.

    Point of order - Basque is not Finno-Ugric - it's a language isolate with no known related languages.

    true. I thought it was - but I can't see any reference to that having even been a theory thirty years ago, when I was studying linguistics. My bad.
  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    Advent 3. Parish Communion BCP

    Come thou long (Cross of Jesus)
    Merbecke minus Gloria
    Psalm 80
    Lo from the desert homes (Darwalls 148th)
    And now O Father (Unde et memores)
    On Jordan's bank (Winchester New)

    Quite emjoyed it, hearty singing despite a smallish number.

    Nothing else, I declined three Carol services as at an age where I wouldn't mind never playing for one again 😏🤣
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    @ThunderBunk @KarlLB

    Boldly Ruining Other People's Languages is a feature of church choirs.

    The local rabbi was generous in their assessment of local efforts at Hebrew. Appropriate I'd say, when the efforts were devout and well intentioned.

    I reckon several here will have had fun with Old Church Slavic in Bogoroditse Devo
    (Rachmaninoff All Night Vigil) - perhaps a smaller pool of people to offend with that one!

    Heron
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    Thank you for the explanations and the links. That anthem is utterly wonderful.
  • Heron wrote: »
    @ThunderBunk @KarlLB

    Boldly Ruining Other People's Languages is a feature of church choirs.

    The local rabbi was generous in their assessment of local efforts at Hebrew. Appropriate I'd say, when the efforts were devout and well intentioned.

    I reckon several here will have had fun with Old Church Slavic in Bogoroditse Devo
    (Rachmaninoff All Night Vigil) - perhaps a smaller pool of people to offend with that one!

    Heron

    Including me. It is one of my missions in life to expunge the bullshit promulgated by Rutter. Church Slavonic is not Russian.
  • Today was our carol service. As our church does not usually have a choir, being a charismatic church with mostly modern worship songs, it was an opportunity for several professional musicians and music teachers in the large congregation to come into their own.
    The songs were mostly traditional carols like Once in royal and O little town and there was a mix of performance and congregational singing. We had a choir of about 30 people to accompany the congregation and this split off into smaller groups to perform mostly acapella (with good beatbox accompaniment), sometimes with a jazz/gospel vibe. The intro was a duet with a band and we finished with singing a few of the livelier carols like Hark the herald accompanied by the band and led by a Nigerian worship leader who is a wonderful recent addition and has a lively spontaneous style. We also had a piece of modern dance (two members of the congregation have a dance company) and a piece of poetry interspersed with trumpet solo. Obviously we had the usual gospel readings and a short sermon as well.
    The service was 1 1/2 hours long and then we had mince pies and mulled wine.
  • Heron wrote: »
    I reckon several here will have had fun with Old Church Slavic in Bogoroditse Devo
    (Rachmaninoff All Night Vigil) - perhaps a smaller pool of people to offend with that one!

    Heron

    Strictly speaking this is New Church Slavonic - a somewhat "Russianised" revision of Old Church Slavonic.
  • but all the 'o's in Bogoroditse are still 'o's - Russian vowel decay does not apply.
  • Today was our carol service. As our church does not usually have a choir, being a charismatic church with mostly modern worship songs, it was an opportunity for several professional musicians and music teachers in the large congregation to come into their own.
    The songs were mostly traditional carols like Once in royal and O little town and there was a mix of performance and congregational singing. We had a choir of about 30 people to accompany the congregation and this split off into smaller groups to perform mostly acapella (with good beatbox accompaniment), sometimes with a jazz/gospel vibe. The intro was a duet with a band and we finished with singing a few of the livelier carols like Hark the herald accompanied by the band and led by a Nigerian worship leader who is a wonderful recent addition and has a lively spontaneous style. We also had a piece of modern dance (two members of the congregation have a dance company) and a piece of poetry interspersed with trumpet solo. Obviously we had the usual gospel readings and a short sermon as well.
    The service was 1 1/2 hours long and then we had mince pies and mulled wine.

    Whew! I bet the wine went down well...

    Sounds good, though. I haven't yet heard how Our Place's carol service went, but I suspect it was the mixture as before, so to speak.
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