Originally posted by Vox Humana
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Not so bright and beautiful
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... from today's Times -
"Lord Lisvane's letter complaining about the popularity at weddings of the saccharine hymn All Things Bright and Beautiful struck a chord with many. Perhaps they could sing the Monty Python version, which ends: “All things scabbed and ulcerous, all pox both great and small. Putrid, foul and gangrenous, the Lord God made them all.”
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
well I had Wacht Auf from Die Meistersinger , the March of the Mastersingers and Crown Imperial .
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... from today's Times -
"Lord Lisvane's letter complaining about the popularity at weddings of the saccharine hymn All Things Bright and Beautiful struck a chord with many. Perhaps they could sing the Monty Python version, which ends: “All things scabbed and ulcerous, all pox both great and small. Putrid, foul and gangrenous, the Lord God made them all.”
He could probably find more enjoyable pastimes than 'organising' little people's church wedding music if he chose to. ("Lord Lisvane's recreations are sailing, shooting, cricket, music (he is a church organist) and country pursuits.") But perhaps Baron Stoneybroke is glad of the £40 or so?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... from today's Times -
........... Perhaps they could sing the Monty Python
.[/I]
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Sometime, somewhere in Liverpool in the late '60s, sitting in the pub after choir practice with most of the other ATB's, we were joined, as we often were, by the organist of the adjacent parish.
He was worried, he said. He was playing for a wedding the next day at short notice: the bride was marrying a sailor and wanted to walk out after the ceremony to the march 'Anchors Aweigh'!
But he he didn't know it and couldn't find the music. Could we help?
So we sang the tune to him several times, and he split a beermat and notated the music on the back of it. Next day the beermat went on the music stand and he improvised a successful performance.
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Originally posted by sturkel View PostSo we sang the tune to him several times, and he split a beermat and notated the music on the back of it. Next day the beermat went on the music stand and he improvised a successful performance.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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‘All things B&B’ is a listing of the glories of creation, that makes it appealing for weddings and funerals with nostalgia for supposed better times. Even the Revised English Hymnal offers Monk’s tune now as well Shaw’s. Ever popular.
Two examples from my time at the chalk face re the language of hymns: what does ‘Lo! He abhors not the Virgin’s womb’ mean? A six year old’s favourite hymn was the one about a settee. Turned out to be ‘Lord of the Dance.’
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Originally posted by jonfan View Post....Two examples from my time at the chalk face re the language of hymns: what does ‘Lo! He abhors not the Virgin’s womb’ mean? A six year old’s favourite hymn was the one about a settee. Turned out to be ‘Lord of the Dance.’
[Vints beat me to it.]
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I think the iconography of hymns used to get introjected deep into one's consciousness by early exposure to it. I was always impressed, at my Junior school, by 'pavilioned in splendour and girded with praise'. Later, noticing how I remembered the line it struck me as redolent of Imperial trappings. On checking today, I found that Robert Grant, its author, had indeed been born in India and had been a Governor of Bombay.
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