A Service for Advent with Carols 27.xi.2022 [L]

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  • DracoM
    Host
    • Mar 2007
    • 13009

    A Service for Advent with Carols 27.xi.2022 [L]

    A Service for Advent with Carols 27.xi.2022 [L]
    Chapel of St John’s College, Cambridge

    Introit: Advent Calendar (Ledger)
    Processional Hymn: O come, O come, Emmanuel (Veni Emmanuel) (descant: David Hill)
    Bidding Prayer
    Carol: There is no rose (Preston)

    I The Message of Advent
    Sentence and Collect
    Antiphons: O Sapientia and O Adonaï
    First lesson: Isaiah 11 vv. 1-5
    Carol: Adam lay ybounden (Warlock)
    Second lesson: 1 Thessalonians 5 vv. 1-11
    Carol: Cedit, Hyems (Abbie Betinis)

    II The Word of God

    Sentence and Collect
    Antiphons: O Radix Jesse and O Clavis David
    Carol: Drop down, ye heavens, from above (Judith Weir)
    Third lesson: Micah 4 vv. 1-4
    Carol: Tomorrow shall be my dancing day (Gardner)
    Fourth lesson: Luke 4 vv. 14-21
    Hymn: Hark, the glad sound! (Bristol) (descant: Christopher Robinson)

    III The Prophetic Call
    Sentence and Collect
    Antiphons: O Oriens and O Rex Gentium
    Carol: One star, at last (Maxwell Davies)
    Fifth lesson: Malachi 3 vv. 1-7
    Carol: Lo! the desert depths are stirr’d (Cheryl Frances-Hoad)
    Sixth lesson: Matthew 3 vv. 1-11
    Hymn: On Jordan’s bank the Baptist’s cry (Winchester New)

    IV The God-Bearer
    Sentence and Collect
    Antiphon: O Emmanuel
    Carol: A tender shoot (Goldschmidt)
    Seventh lesson: Luke 1 vv. 39-49
    Carol: A spotless rose (Howells)
    Magnificat: Chichester Service (Walton)
    Eighth lesson: John 3 vv. 1-8
    Sentence and The Christmas Collect
    Carol: Nova! Nova! (Iain Farrington)
    Hymn: Lo! He comes with clouds descending (Helmsley) (descant: Robinson)

    The College Prayer and The Blessing

    Organ Voluntary: Chorale Prelude ‘Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland’ BWV 661 (Bach)

    George Herbert (Assistant Organist)
    Anna Ryan (Flute)
    Oliver Wass (Harp)

    Andrew Nethsingha (Director of Music)
  • Pulcinella
    Host
    • Feb 2014
    • 11258

    #2
    15:00 start.

    I might have to catch up on Sounds (now I know how), as I'll be going to the similar event at York Minster (though that doesn't start until 17:30).

    Comment

    • smittims
      Full Member
      • Aug 2022
      • 4602

      #3
      This is a usual 'must-listen' for me, and the start of the 'it's starting to feel like Christmas' time of year. I recommend it strongly, not just to Christians, but to all who feel there must be something more to life than Strickly, paying the bills, and keeping warm. Pour something soothing and curl up to listen.

      Comment

      • Petrushka
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 12390

        #4
        Time again for my annual complaint that it's a pity that 'Helmsley', surely one of the truly great hymn tunes, has its only outing of the year at this service.

        Needless to say it will receive its customary sing-along at Petrushka Towers.
        "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

        Comment

        • ardcarp
          Late member
          • Nov 2010
          • 11102

          #5
          'Helmsley', surely one of the truly great hymn tunes
          Agreed! I like it pitched high though. It's gone down to G in Songs of Praise (bottom B for the sops). A major is an altogether more joyful key.

          Comment

          • Rolmill
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 637

            #6
            Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
            Agreed! I like it pitched high though. It's gone down to G in Songs of Praise (bottom B for the sops). A major is an altogether more joyful key.
            Also in G in the New English Hymnal (which we use in our church), as well as in the Willcocks arrangement in C for C 3. My old church used A&M and my recollection is that it was in A flat. I don't think I've seen it published in A.

            Anyway, another enticing music list from SJC (though it would be good to ditch the omnipresent Gardner 'Tomorrow shall be my dancing day' occasionally...) - definitely looking forward to this.

            Comment

            • ardcarp
              Late member
              • Nov 2010
              • 11102

              #7
              Gardner 'Tomorrow shall be my dancing day'
              I love it.

              It's the Goldschmidt I could do without. (It seems to have become increasingly popular in recent times.) It starts and ends just fine, but Otto might have avoided those high notes which always sound 'shrieky' however well done

              Comment

              • smittims
                Full Member
                • Aug 2022
                • 4602

                #8
                Poor old John Gardner seems destined to be a one-hit wonder, for all his symphonies, concertos and canatatas. I once came across a big choral and orchestral work commissioned to celebrate the Shakespeare 400th in 1964. He might have guessed it was the sort of work fated to be peformed once or perhaps twice, then 'ditched'.

                Comment

                • Magister Chori
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2020
                  • 96

                  #9
                  The music list is - as always with Andrew Nethsingha - a very good mix of old and new items, moreover with the instrumental addition of flute and harp, but I still have to complain that I would also have liked to hear some of the simpler carols - mainly taken from the 1928 Oxford Book of Carols - that were common in the George Guest era and Guest's own beautifully crafted advent carols arrangements which sadly, since his times, I have never heard anymore from SJJC.

                  However, I'll be very happy to hear the opening Ledger and Preston: two very fine pieces indeed.

                  Comment

                  • smittims
                    Full Member
                    • Aug 2022
                    • 4602

                    #10
                    Well said; yes, I too feel there should be room for the 'simpler carols'. I think we need to avoid too much sophistication at this traditional event.

                    Comment

                    • Keraulophone
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 1996

                      #11
                      Originally posted by smittims View Post
                      Poor old John Gardner seems destined to be a one-hit wonder.
                      JLG did write other carols, including those in the same set written for St Paul's Girls School, of which he was in a very distinguished line of (part-time) Directors of Music, The Holly and the Ivy being the other one that gets an occasional outing.

                      Despite writing 249 opus numbers, and Barbirolli having premiered his 1st Symphony Op.2 in 1951, Gardner's 'conventional' musical language was never really in fashion after the 1950s, when post-war expectations brought on by Peter Grimes and the beginning of the New Elizabethan Age of optimism and modernity were not met by composers who wrote tunes, however original and various were their works (the notable exception being Malcolm Arnold).

                      Comment

                      • jonfan
                        Full Member
                        • Dec 2010
                        • 1464

                        #12
                        I too enjoyed GG’s enthusiasm for the 1928 OBC, shared now by Harry Christophers and the Sixteen who use quite a few on their Christmas CDs. Each DOM has their own agenda moving forward and I’m happy with that.

                        I always think JG’s Dancing Day sounds galumphing on the organ, a giant trying to be a Sugar Plum Fairy. We always use piano which goes well with the other two percussion instruments, then unison throughout with descant last chorus.

                        Agree Helmsley one of THE great tunes, made peerless with RVW’s delicious inner harmonies. For the last verse harmonies I go to Martin How, with an organ part to die for and a descant above if you wish. I first heard it at the 1981 first broadcast of Advent from St John’s with Ab being GG’s choice of key.
                        Last edited by jonfan; 22-11-22, 12:05. Reason: Typo

                        Comment

                        • Guest

                          #13
                          As always, timing clashes with another commitment!

                          Comment

                          • Alison
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 6493

                            #14
                            I’d like to hear GG’s Zion, At thy shining Gates and The Lord at First did Adam make.

                            Comment

                            • ardcarp
                              Late member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 11102

                              #15
                              The Holly and the Ivy being the other one that gets an occasional outing
                              I find that one just a wee bit trite.

                              Comment

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