CE Ely Cathedral Wed, 9th November 2016

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • DracoM
    Host
    • Mar 2007
    • 12960

    CE Ely Cathedral Wed, 9th November 2016

    CE Ely Cathedral


    Order of Service:


    Introit: The Spiritual Railway (Arthur Wills)
    Responses: Arthur Wills
    Psalms 47, 48, 49 (Beckwith, Walmisley, Elvey)
    First Lesson: Leviticus 26: 3-13
    Office Hymn: Most holy Lord and God of heaven (Plainsong)
    Canticles: Verse Service (Arthur Wills)
    Second Lesson: Philippians 4: 4-9
    Anthem: O pray for the peace of Jerusalem (Howells)
    Final Hymn: What shall we pray for those who died? (John Bell)


    Organ Voluntary: Elegy (Arthur Wills)


    Organists: Edmund Aldhouse and Alexander Goodwin
    Directors of Music: Sarah MacDonald and Paul Trepte
  • Finzi4ever
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 584

    #2
    a real blast of Fenlandia, with a thoroughly deserved Wills-fest!
    Joyfully proclaiming the love of God in worship, outreach, welcome and care.

    Was a Wills anthem in addition considered a bridge too far? (Quietly pleased the voluntary is not the Etheldreda Rag...)

    Comment

    • Quilisma
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 181

      #3
      A Wills anthem would indeed have been lovely, of course, but consideration has also been given to the fact that the repeat broadcast will be on Remembrance Sunday... There has been a lot of Wills this year, in honour of Arthur's ninetieth birthday (which was in September). I can confirm that he is in very fine fettle, and I daresay he will be with us in the congregation on Wednesday.

      Comment

      • ardcarp
        Late member
        • Nov 2010
        • 11102

        #4
        Looking forward to it. Do we have boys' and girls' choirs combined here? Hope so.

        Comment

        • Quilisma
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 181

          #5
          Indeed we do! Hence both DoMs and both organists...

          Comment

          • Quilisma
            Full Member
            • Dec 2010
            • 181

            #6
            Given that the introit in particular is very little known, let me provide a few details. The words are taken from a memorial tablet now displayed in what was once the cloister of Ely Cathedral, between the south door and the lay clerks' vestry. The tablet reads as follows:

            In memory of William Pickering, who died December 24th 1845 aged 30 years. Also Richard Edger, who died December 24th 1845 aged 24 years.

            THE SPIRITUAL RAILWAY

            The Line to heaven by Christ was made
            With heavenly truth the Rails are laid,
            From Earth to Heaven the Line extends,
            To Life Eternal where it ends.

            Repentance is the Station then
            Where Passengers are taken in,
            No Fee for them is there to pay,
            For Jesus is himself the way.

            God's Word is the first Engineer
            It points the way to Heaven so clear,
            Through tunnels dark and dreary here
            It does the way to Glory steer.

            God's Love the Fire, his Truth the Steam,
            Which drives the Engine and the Train,
            All you who would to Glory ride,
            Must come to Christ, in him abide

            In First, and Second, and Third Class,
            Repentance, Faith and Holiness,
            You must the way to Glory gain
            Or you th Christ will mot remain.

            Come then poor Sinners, now's the time
            At any Station on the Line,
            If you'll repent and turn from sin
            The Train will stop and take you in.

            Arthur Wills omits the penultimate stanza in his setting, which was published in facsimile manuscript in 1986 by Oecumuse, now, alas, defunct; I believe it has not entered the catalogue of any successor publishing house, so is presumably now unavailable.

            The Preces and Responses by Arthur Wills were written for Bruce Wegg and the Choir of St Augustine's Church, Wisbech, and were published by Novello in 1967.They are more commonly sung by upper voices only with organ accomaniment. The cantor part is notated metrically (fingers crossed!), so it is through-composed.

            The Verse Service was written for Timothy Lees and the Choir of St John's Church, Wolverhampton, and was published by OUP in 1974. It is, however, very much an Ely piece, and at this time Arthur Wills was planning his major radical upgrade of the organ, tamed somewhat in the subsequent Millennium rebuild, although most of the essential tangy characteristics remain.

            The Howells piece needs no introduction, I should hope, and the psalmody and Office Hymn are as set for the date and day of the week.
            Last edited by Quilisma; 08-11-16, 18:59.

            Comment

            • DracoM
              Host
              • Mar 2007
              • 12960

              #7
              Great stuff...many thx.

              Comment

              • Gabriel Jackson
                Full Member
                • May 2011
                • 686

                #8
                Originally posted by Quilisma View Post
                Oecumuse, now, alas, defunct;
                Defunct because its proprietor skipped police bail in 2004

                Comment

                • Quilisma
                  Full Member
                  • Dec 2010
                  • 181

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Gabriel Jackson View Post
                  Defunct because its proprietor skipped police bail in 2004
                  I'm glad I don't know any more than that... Some of the catalogue has been reissued by other publishers, but much has not.

                  Comment

                  • ardcarp
                    Late member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 11102

                    #10
                    THE SPIRITUAL RAILWAY

                    The Line to heaven by Christ was made
                    With heavenly truth the Rails are laid,
                    From Earth to Heaven the Line extends,
                    To Life Eternal where it ends.

                    Repentance is the Station then
                    Where Passengers are taken in,
                    No Fee for them is there to pay,
                    For Jesus is himself the way.

                    God's Word is the first Engineer
                    It points the way to Heaven so clear,
                    Through tunnels dark and dreary here
                    It does the way to Glory steer.

                    God's Love the Fire, his Truth the Steam,
                    Which drives the Engine and the Train,
                    All you who would to Glory ride,
                    Must come to Christ, in him abide

                    In First, and Second, and Third Class,
                    Repentance, Faith and Holiness,
                    You must the way to Glory gain
                    Or you th Christ will mot remain.

                    Come then poor Sinners, now's the time
                    At any Station on the Line,
                    If you'll repent and turn from sin
                    The Train will stop and take you in.
                    Thanks for that Q. I wonder how soon after 1845 those lines (no pun intended) were written? There are shades of the egalitarian "The Gospel Train" [No 2nd class aboard this train], and in that penultimate verse, the distinctly not "All Things Bright and Beautiful" [The rich man in his castle, etc]
                    Last edited by ardcarp; 08-11-16, 20:36.

                    Comment

                    • subcontrabass
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 2780

                      #11
                      Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
                      Thanks for that Q. I wonder how soon after 1845 those lines (no pun intended) were written? There are shades of the egalitarian "The Gospel Train" [No 2nd class aboard this train], and in that penultimate verse, the distinctly not "All Things Bright and Beautiful" [The rich man in his castle, etc]
                      The evidence seems to be that they were written before the accident. There is a lengthy discussion here: http://willyougotothatland.blogspot.co.uk/ The poem was published in several places during 1845 and may have been published earlier.

                      Comment

                      • Quilisma
                        Full Member
                        • Dec 2010
                        • 181

                        #12
                        Yes, there is quite a bit of speculation about who wrote this poem, and indeed when. (Google to the rescue...) It's not attributed on the memorial tablet. Those are very interesting parallels. I'm glad that Arthur Wills omitted the dodgy stanza. Another thing in the same category is "The Heavenly Aeroplane", from the 1930s, now known through John Rutter's setting, which was indeed an anthem here one Tuesday last term. And why not?

                        We note that "a certain somebody" appears by name in the psalms today. Awkward...

                        Comment

                        • mw963
                          Full Member
                          • Feb 2012
                          • 538

                          #13
                          Brilliant that we should have the word TRUMP in the psalms, and that the P should be given such explosive articulation. One wonders whether the latter was officially sanctioned (perhaps even encouraged) or just a spur of the moment unauthorised "comment".

                          (Apologies Qu, hadn't read your final comment when I wrote mine).

                          Comment

                          • Finzi4ever
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 584

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Quilisma View Post
                            Yes, there is quite a bit of speculation about who wrote this poem, and indeed when. (Google to the rescue...) It's not attributed on the memorial tablet. Those are very interesting parallels. I'm glad that Arthur Wills omitted the dodgy stanza. Another thing in the same category is "The Heavenly Aeroplane", from the 1930s, now known through John Rutter's setting, which was indeed an anthem here one Tuesday last term. And why not?

                            We note that "a certain somebody" appears by name in the psalms today. Awkward...
                            Yes, I see that made it onto Twitter - how horribly prophetic!

                            Comment

                            • Finzi4ever
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 584

                              #15
                              'O pray for the peace of America'...

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X