What did you sing at church today?

1118119120121123

Comments

  • LUCERNA LAUDONIAE would be nice ...
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    edited August 2
    I think that was probably the first tune I knew to FTBOTE.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Three hymns (including one rugby ground "banger" during the semi-closed season) plus the usual Mass parts and a Bach chorale prelude during communion.
    Gather us in.
    Dear Lord and Father of mankind.
    Guide me O thou great Redeemer.
  • John 8:12-20, "I am the Light of the World"

    When Morning Gilds The Skies (Laudes Domini)
    Light Of The World (Hughes)
    In Christ Alone (Townend)
    Shi*e Jesus Shi*e (Ken*rick)
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    John 8:12-20, "I am the Light of the World"

    When Morning Gilds The Skies (Laudes Domini)
    Light Of The World (Hughes)
    In Christ Alone (Townend)
    Shi*e Jesus Shi*e (Ken*rick)

    Interesting placement of the asterisks in that last one. Pray for me, my brothers and sisters, for I must play the wretched thing (and, purgatorial foretaste, Be Still For The Presence of the Lord) in a couple of weeks. Better stuck behind a bass guitar than singing the things, I suppose.

    Yeah, not my regular habitat but it's a long story.
  • Colossians 1.

    “Jesus is Lord! Creation’s voice proclaims it” (Mansell).
    “Jesus is the name we honour” (Lawson-Johnson).
    “Join all the glorious names” - Darwall's 148th.
    “Meekness and majesty” (Kendrick).
    “Name of all majesty” - Majestas.
  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    At our first Sunday in the month "Hymns of Praise" service:
    And Can It Be, That I Should Gain / SAGINA
    Be Still, My Soul / FINLANDIA
    As the Deer Pants for the Water / AS THE DEER
    O God beyond All Praising / THAXTED
    In Heavenly Love Abiding / PENLAN
  • MrsBeakyMrsBeaky Shipmate
    This morning I was stewarding at our Cathedral's children and caregivers Eucharist.
    We didn't have an organist today so ably led by the clergy member who presided we sang the congregational mass setting acapella.
    And it was lovely- children's and adult voices soaring up into the roof of the Lady Chapel.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Parish Communion
    Mass of St Thomas
    All Creatures of our God and King
    In Christ alone
    God is love, let heaven adore him- Abbot’s Leigh
    Take my life - Nottingham
    Now thank we all our God- Nun Danket
  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    @Baptist Trainfan some good ones there. Do you usually sing Darwalls to "Join all the glorious names"? In west country chapels (Methodist usually) they seem to like one called St Godric which has generally been sung lustily when I have had to play it. Must admit to preferring the Darwalls though and I love playing "Name of all majesty" but it is a sadly rare one in rural conservative circles.

    Anyway today I was landed with Mattins yet again 😳

    Christ whose glory fills the skies (Ratisbon)
    All my hope (Michael)
    A man there lived in Galilee (Tyrol)
    Sent forth by God's blessimg (Ash Grove)

    Quite a jolly selection for BCP Mattins I thought and they sang well. The last two were lovely.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    We always had to avoid catching the eyes of a particular chorister's parents if we had The Ash Grove in Belfast; they couldn't keep a straight face for thinking of the alternative words ... 😈

    Our offerings today:

    God is love, his the care - Personent Hodie
    For I'm building a people of power - Dave Richards
    May the mind of Christ my saviour - St Leonard's
    Give me joy in my heart - Sing Hosanna*
    Blessed assurance - Blessed Assurance

    * as the Communion hymn 🙄

    I've been asked for my input re: possible future hymn choices, and to that end have (against my better judgement) ordered a copy of the Dreaded Orange Book™ - with just the melody - so that I can make some informed suggestions.

    Let the games commence! 👹


  • Piglet wrote: »
    We always had to avoid catching the eyes of a particular chorister's parents if we had The Ash Grove in Belfast; they couldn't keep a straight face for thinking of the alternative words ... 😈

    Curiosity got the better of me, but a little googlery took care if it - thank you...
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited August 3
    Truron wrote: »
    @Baptist Trainfan some good ones there. Do you usually sing Darwalls to "Join all the glorious names"?
    Thank you.

    No, I'd consider the proper tune to JATGN to be Croft's 136th, but it's not well known here. I don't know St Godric.

    Sent forth by God's blessing (Ash Grove).
    We use this, it goes down well.

  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    Christ is my firm foundation (The rock on which I stand)
    Noah built the most enormous boat
    I can see the promised land (Though there's pain within the plan)
    A thousand generations (falling down in worship)
    Jesus, my king, my wonderful saviour
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    Piglet wrote: »
    <snip>
    I've been asked for my input re: possible future hymn choices, and to that end have (against my better judgement) ordered a copy of the Dreaded Orange Book™ - with just the melody - so that I can make some informed suggestions.

    Let the games commence! 👹

    IIRC it has very useful indexes (not in order): Metrical, Scripture, Lectionary, Tunes, Authors, Composers, Uses. It is also covered as a hymnal by hymnary.org.
  • 1662 Morning Prayer, 7th after Trinity

    All Creatures of our God and King
    Now Thank We all our God
    All my Hope on God is Founded
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    It does indeed.

    Part of the process is apparently to be matching hymns to particular uses (eg Communion), although whether our suggestions will be heeded may be another matter.
  • It was Emancipation Day on the 1st, so...

    Oh, freedom, freedom is coming
    This Little Light Of Mine
    When Israel was in Egypt's land
    Anthem: Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel
    Anthem: By The Waters Of Babylon
    Amazing grace
    Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
    Anthem: Nobody knows the trouble I've seen
    Mine eyes have seen the glory
    We are marching/Siyahamba
    Postlude: Hymn To Freedom - Oscar Peterson

    They were separated by prayers and brief meditations: the effect of the whole was very moving.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    It being the first Sunday of the month, we had Evensong:

    Ferial responses
    Magnificat & Nunc Dimittis - chants by Robinson and Farrant
    Psalm 42: 1-7, chant by Samuel Wesley

    Hymns:

    Oft in danger, oft in woe - University College
    Take my life, and let it be - Nottingham
    Saviour, again to thy dear name we raise - Ellers (gosh that's an old wailer!)

  • TruronTruron Shipmate
    @Piglet If yiu find Ellers a wailer (which it is) I advise you to avoid "Pax Dei" the other tune in A&M. You would not have heard whooping and scooping like it 😩

    I had a call at 30 minutes notice to fill in Evensong myself tonight. All pretty uneventful.

    O God of Bethel (Martyrdom)
    O my Saviour lifted (North Coates)
    The day is past and over (St Anatolius)
  • August 3rd,Pentecost 8

    Choir

    God is forgiveness, / Taizé
    Spirit of Jesus, if I love my neighbour, / Wren, Damon

    Hymns
    Let us with a gladsome mind, / Monkland
    We know that Christ is raised, / Engelberg
    Christians lift your hearts and voices, / Triumph
    Alleluia sing to Jesus, / Hyfrydol
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    We are doing a series on Revelation. All the hymns came out of the Apocalypse.
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    Interesting.

    I led a Bible study on Revelation in my 20s. Very slow going as the material I sourced went rather in-depth. People joked the Apocalypse would come before we finished. I moved away somewhere around chapter 7 iirc.

    Didn't make it to the church I intended to go to to yesterday.

    All my hope on God is founded (Michael)
    Come, Holy Spirit, Lord of Grace (Tallis' Ordinal; procession to font for baptisms)
    Let all mortal flesh keep silence (Picardy; I adore this hymn and was sorry to miss it being sung by the choir)
    An upper room did our Lord prepare (O Waly Waly)
    Guide me, o Thou great redeemer (Cwm Rhondda)
  • Come Down, O Love Divine (DOWN AMPNEY)
    Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Skies (RATISBON)
    Christ Is The World's True Light (ST. JOAN)
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Climacus wrote: »
    Interesting.

    I led a Bible study on Revelation in my 20s. Very slow going as the material I sourced went rather in-depth. People joked the Apocalypse would come before we finished. I moved away somewhere around chapter 7 iirc.

    Didn't make it to the church I intended to go to to yesterday.

    All my hope on God is founded (Michael)
    Come, Holy Spirit, Lord of Grace (Tallis' Ordinal; procession to font for baptisms)
    Let all mortal flesh keep silence (Picardy; I adore this hymn and was sorry to miss it being sung by the choir)
    An upper room did our Lord prepare (O Waly Waly)
    Guide me, o Thou great redeemer (Cwm Rhondda)

    That's a very decent selection of hymns! :)
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Looking forward to next Sunday, when we have a sort of Songs of Praise instead of Pancakes and Praise, which is taking a summer break. Hoping for some decent hymns.
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    Hope it goes well.

    Back in the olden days when we moved to a new hymnal, a hymn festival of sorts was put on where hymns were nominated by writing 5 on a piece of paper and the "winners" sung at a special get-together. The choir director told me I had good taste in hymns....which I took to mean she liked the ones I did!
  • Did I say that we enjoyed watching the "Cymanfa Ganu" hymnfest from the National Eisteddfod on Sunday night? https://tinyurl.com/2s4h5ye7. We attended "live" last year when the Eisteddfod was closer to home (and both picked up mild doses of Covid!). They do provide simultaneous translation via an earpiece for non-Welsh speakers.
  • Tomorrow's schedule at Our Place for Trinity 8:

    Let us with a gladsome mind (Monkland)
    O God our help in ages past (St Anne)
    Let us break bread together on our knees (Anon)
    Ye servants of the Lord (Narenza)
  • ClimacusClimacus Shipmate
    Ninth Sunday after Pentecost

    Setting: Dudman

    Come Spirit blest, our hearts inspire (Richmond)
    Be exalted, O God [for Psalm 50]
    Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness (Was Lebet)
    I am the bread of life (Bread of Life)
    Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord (Battle Hymn)


    They are introducing a new hymnal next week.
  • “Holy, holy, holy!” - Nicaea.
    “We want to see Jesus lifted high” (Noel Richards).
    “Praise the source of faith and learning” - Deerhurst.
    “May the mind of Christ, our Saviour” - St Leonards.
    “Go forth and tell!” - Woodlands.
  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    At 9 o'clock communion:
    Lord, for the Years / LORD OF THE YEARS
    *Restore, O Lord, the honour of your name! / Kendrick
    All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name / MILES LANE

    *We in the congregation struggled a bit with this one as no-one really knew Kendrick's tune
  • "I am the Good Shepherd"

    Praise Him, Praise Him! Jesus, Our Blessèd Redeemer (Joyful Song)
    Master, Speak! Thy Servant Heareth (Master, Speak! Thy Servant Heareth)
    The King Of Love My Shepherd Is (Dominus Regit Me)
    All The Way My Saviour Leads Me (All The Way)

    The last one doesn't mention shepherds, but we'd learnt by that time that a Shepherd leads his sheep.
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Songs of praise:
    How great thou art
    Great is Thy faithfulness
    I the Lord of sea and sky
    Seek ye first the kingdom of God
    Be still for the presence of the Lord
    Thine be the glory
    Guide me O thou great redeemer.

    All tunes obvious?

    There were readings, prayers and introductions explaining why a hymn had been chosen or how it came to be written.

  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    As I was serving (again!!!) I didn't do much singing, but we had:

    Immortal, invisible, God only wise - St Denio
    Morning has broken* - Bunessan
    Lord Jesus Christ, you have come to us - Living Lord
    Give thanks with a grateful heart - Don Moen
    All my hope on God is founded - Michael

    * This was actually slated to be May the fragrance of Jesus fill this place. by Guess Who, but our guitar player wasn't able to be there and today's organist (who actually knows what he's doing) didn't fancy it (wise fellow!), so it was changed.

    I suppose I should be thankful for small mercies ... :naughty:

    As we had the Proper Organist™, we got a nice rendition of Haydn's St Anthony Chorale as extroit music. :)
  • Bunessan is a most lovely tune, but Morning has broken always seems to me to be a bit twee. The Christmas hymn Child in the manger, to the same tune, is Much Better IMHO., but not in August!

    Still, as you say, small mercies...
  • Works well with Albert Bayly's Praise and thanksgiving.
  • Bunessan is a most lovely tune, but Morning has broken always seems to me to be a bit twee.
    Oh, but Cat Stevens!

    I’m afraid BUNESSAN and “Morning Has Broken” are so firmly melded together in my brain that any other text to that tune just feels wrong to me.
    This morning, I found myself (for Reasons), at two different services—first another, nearby church, and then our own place.

    The hymns at Service No. 1 were:

    “I Sing the Mighty Power of God”/ELLACOMBE
    “We’ve Come This Far by Faith”
    “Look Who Gathers at Christ’s Table!”/COPELAND
    “Now Thank We All Our God”/NUN DANKET ALLE GOTT


    The hymns at Service No. 2 were:

    “If Thou but Trust in God to Guide Thee”/ WER NUR DEN LIEBEN GOTT
    “Great Is Thy Faithfulness”/FAITHFULNESS
    “Keep Your Lamps Trimmed and Burning”
    “The God of Abraham Praise”/LEONI


  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I hadn't realised until this morning that the words of Morning has broken were written by Eleanor Farjeon, who was quite a well-respected poet.

    She also wrote People look east.

    This post is brought to you by Piglet's Department of Useless Information.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Bunessan is a most lovely tune, but Morning has broken always seems to me to be a bit twee. The Christmas hymn Child in the manger, to the same tune, is Much Better IMHO., but not in August!

    Still, as you say, small mercies...

    Leanabh an àigh, as it is in these parts.
  • Piglet wrote: »
    I hadn't realised until this morning that the words of Morning has broken were written by Eleanor Farjeon, who was quite a well-respected poet.

    She also wrote People look east.

    This post is brought to you by Piglet's Department of Useless Information.
    Useless Information, perhaps, but also Interesting Information!


  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    Let our praise be your welcome (We are here for you)
    Praise is rising
    We did not bear the wounds that freed (Or walk the road to Calvary) - a new one to me
    The Lord's my Shepherd (Crimond)
    Jesus said that if I thirst
  • Works well with Albert Bayly's Praise and thanksgiving.

    Yes, it does - I had a feeling that there was at least one other hymn that used Bunessan, so thanks for the reminder!

    A good choice for Harvest Festival, perhaps as a post-Communion hymn.
  • Works well with Albert Bayly's Praise and thanksgiving.

    Yes, it does - I had a feeling that there was at least one other hymn that used Bunessan, so thanks for the reminder!
    There also “Baptized in Water.”

    You mentioned how “Morning Has Broken” always seems a bit twee to you. I wonder how much of that is due to the meter—5.5.5.4.D. Those short lines can give a sense of sing-songiness.


  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    We had:
    This is the day (again)
    God of great and God of small (a new one on me and both obscure and in copyright so no midi or xml version of the score to be had, so I hammered it into GAELIC LULLABY, commonly used for a version of Jesus loves me, this I know, which came out better than it might have done, even if I did have to add an alleluia and *ahem* finesse the rhythm in places)
    I need thee every hour
    O God, you search me and you know me
    Thine be the glory
  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    You mentioned how “Morning Has Broken” always seems a bit twee to you. I wonder how much of that is due to the meter—5.5.5.4.D. Those short lines can give a sense of sing-songiness.

    Brits of a certain age may think of it primarily as a school assembly song. I certainly do (though as a six-year old I probably understood very little of it!)

    I used to have the sheet music which included the beautiful Rick Wakeman piano part, but never played it in church!
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    CH4 also prescribes BUNESSAN for Every new morning God gives us freely and Christ be beside me.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Gill H wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    You mentioned how “Morning Has Broken” always seems a bit twee to you. I wonder how much of that is due to the meter—5.5.5.4.D. Those short lines can give a sense of sing-songiness.

    Brits of a certain age may think of it primarily as a school assembly song. I certainly do (though as a six-year old I probably understood very little of it!)

    I used to have the sheet music which included the beautiful Rick Wakeman piano part, but never played it in church!

    Ahem - Cat Stevens
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Christ be beside me, as in the "middle verses" of St Patrick's Breastplate? I think I may have sung them to Bunessan, but what I'm remembering from my Church of Ireland days is something different, probably "Deirdre", which misses out the word "be", and is 4 4 4 4 D metre.
  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    KarlLB wrote: »
    Gill H wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    You mentioned how “Morning Has Broken” always seems a bit twee to you. I wonder how much of that is due to the meter—5.5.5.4.D. Those short lines can give a sense of sing-songiness.

    Brits of a certain age may think of it primarily as a school assembly song. I certainly do (though as a six-year old I probably understood very little of it!)

    I used to have the sheet music which included the beautiful Rick Wakeman piano part, but never played it in church!

    Ahem - Cat Stevens

    Yes, but it was Rick on the piano!
Sign In or Register to comment.