What did you sing at church today?

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  • That's interesting because, to me, both the two final hymns go to "Hyfrydol"
  • Yes, to us as well. But it wouldn't do to have two hymns to the same tune in a service!

    Also our usual pianist (who was on duty today) will try and play everything with an 8.7.8.7.D metre to Hyfrodol - "delightful" tune but it can be overused (see above).
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited April 12
    Indeed so! There are quite a number of good Welsh tunes to that metre.
  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    Morning communion
    O Worship the King all glorious above - HANOVER
    Praise to the Lord, the Almighty - LOBE DEN HERREN
    Jesus! the Name High over all - LYDIA

    Unfortunately, we are not able to have an organist every week. I am no musician, but I consider the lady pianist we had today is the best from our pool of available talent.
  • Easter 2 (aka Low Sunday) at Our Place:

    The Lord is risen indeed
    (Narenza or St Michael)
    Now the green blade riseth (Noel Nouvelet)
    The strife is o'er, the battle done (Vulpius or Victory)
    Love's redeeming work is done (Savannah)

    An excellent choice IMHO. I'm not sure which of the alternative tunes they will have sung (my Spy can never remember these details!), but all are equally well-known by a fair few of our regulars.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Easter 2 - Divine Mercy Sunday.
    Alleluia, alleluia give praise
    Make me a channel
    Eagles wings
    Majesty.
    The people sang, which is always encouraging.
  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    All creatures of our God and King
    Who is the king of the jungle (with actions)
    Your love is amazing (I enjoyed being reminded of this wonderful thread from The Olde Shippe)
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Low Sunday/Easter 2 (delete according to preference) at St Pete's was much more musically enjoyable than Easter Day:

    Crown him with many crowns - Diademata
    This joyful Eastertide - Vreuchten
    The God of Abram praise - Leoni
    We will lay our burden down - Laying Down
    Thine be the glory - Maccabaeus
  • Believing without seeing.

    “Alleluia! Sing to Jesus” - Hyfrydol.
    “Alleluia, alleluia, give thanks to the risen Lord” - its own tune.
    “If you believe and I believe” - The Lincolnshire Poacher.
    “These are the facts” - Epiphany Hymn.
    “Have faith in God, my heart” - Carlisle.
    "I know that my Redeemer lives" - Church Triumphant.
  • Our Place will soon be singing The Lincolnshire Poacher, as it's one of the tunes for The happy birds Te Deum sing, 'tis Mary's month of May...
    :grimace:

    My Spy tells me that today's service was well-attended - 31, which is about our average turn-out at the moment, even though a few were at Away, because Easter, holidays, etc. etc..
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Our Place will soon be singing The Lincolnshire Poacher, as it's one of the tunes for The happy birds Te Deum sing, 'tis Mary's month of May...
    :grimace:

    What fresh new hell?
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited April 13
    Here it is (the lyrics can be found below the pic, above the comments):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEzc5-xikkk&list=RDVEzc5-xikkk&start_radio=1

    The song also goes well to Ellacombe (The day of resurrection), should you feel so inclined...
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    We transferred Evensong from last Sunday to yesterday, because Easter, but we sang some nice seasonal stuff, as well as the usual chants for the canticles. I was singing the office.

    Psalm 114 - Tonus Peregrinus

    Hymns:

    Come, let us join our cheerful songs - Nativity
    The head that once was crowned with thorns - St Magnus :heart:
    Ye choirs of new Jerusalem - St Fulbert
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited April 18
    Easter 3 (already! :flushed: ) at Our Place tomorrow:

    Christ the Lord is risen again (Wurttemberg)
    Something from The Sheet (see below)
    Let all the world in every corner sing (Luckington)
    The day of resurrection (Ellacombe)

    The Something from The Sheet is a piece of drivel hymn - I don't yet know what the words or tune might be - in honour of St George, whose feast day falls on Thursday, FatherInCharge is an ardent royalist and patriot. so Mass on Thursday will commemorate our possibly mythical patron saint, with prayers for King, Country, and Government (all much needed, I suppose).

    On top of all this, the following Sunday afternoon (26th) will see Our Place holding the annual Masonic Service in honour of St George...at which no doubt the brethren will give voice to I vow to thee my country, the National Dirge, and other fireside favourites.
    :naughty:

  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Well we are having guitar-based hymns today as my wife is in hospital for her heart op and the mother of both of the other pianists is in hospital in a bad way. And one of our guitarists has just been diagnosed with lymphoma.
    We are fortunate to have so many competent musicians..... but the coincidence is extraordinary. It's almost as though someone has given the music people the evil eye.
  • I don't know about that - but the evil eye certainly glowered at our sound system this morning, meaning two unaccompanied hymns (sung very well) and two with garbled music.

    “Christ is risen! Shout hosanna!” - Nettleton.

    “Jesus the Lord said: ‘I am the Bread”. - Yisu Na Kaha.

    “Be known to us in breaking bread” - Belmont.

    “Sent forth by God's blessing” - The Ash Grove.
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    Another week of choir holiday.

    We have a gospel (Fulda)
    Now the green blade (Noel Nouvelet)
    Alleluia Alleluia give thanks to the risen Lord (Alleluia No1)
    I danced in the morning (Lord of the dance)

    Mass of St Thomas (Thorne)

    always love singing Noel Nouvelet + a lovely narrative sermon.

    Heron
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Our offerings today at St Pete's:

    All hail the power of Jesus' name - Miles Lane
    All heaven declares
    Alleluia, sing to Jesus - Hyfrydol
    As we are gathered
    Forth in thy name, O Lord, I go - Song 34

    Could have been worse, and we had the benefit of guitars where appropriate.
  • Our Place had a good turn-out, despite a few being at Away.

    My Spy (mercifully) can't remember the words of the offertory hymn, sung in honour of St George, but it was set to the tune of John Brown's Body...

    :grimace:
  • Third Sunday of the month, so Communion and hence only three hymns

    O worship the King (Hanover)
    All My Hope on you is Founded (Michael)
    Take My Life, and Let me Be (Nottingham)
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited April 19
    It was Youth Sunday at our place today, meaning the youth chose a theme and planned and led the service. The hymns were:

    “God Welcomes All”/THEMBA AMEN
    “Come! Live in the Light!” (“We Are Called”)/WE ARE CALLED
    “What Is the World Like”/NEW WORLD
    “You Shall Go Out with Joy” (“The Trees of the Field”)/THE TREES OF THE FIELD


  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    I didn’t make Communion this morning ( no choir required) but the designated hymns were:
    Rejoice the Lord is king
    Before the throne of God above
    This joyful Eastertide
    Glorious things of thee are spoken

    Evensong
    Introit: This joyful Eastertide arr Ledger
    Responses: Smith
    Canticles: Vaughan Williams
    Anthem: Blessed be the God and Father- S. S. Wesley

    Hymns:
    New songs of celebration render- Rendez à Dieu
    All you who seek a comfort sure- St Bernard
    Ye choirs of new Jerusalem- St. Fulbert
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited April 20
    Our Place had a good turn-out, despite a few being at Away.

    My Spy (mercifully) can't remember the words of the offertory hymn, sung in honour of St George, but it was set to the tune of John Brown's Body...

    :grimace:

    Which, as enny fule kno, is also the tune to Mine eyes have seen the glory (Battle Hymn Of The Republic).

    My Spy specifically mentioned John Brown's Body, which allowed my thoughts (like those of Emily in The Mysteries of Udolpho) to arrange themselves in the following stanza:

    Don Trump's body lies a'mouldering in the grave,
    Don Trump's body lies a'mouldering in the grave,
    Don Trump's body lies a'mouldering in the grave,
    And we won't hear his voice no more!

    Glory, glory, we shall see his face no more
    Glory, glory. we shall hear his lies no more,
    Glory, glory, Satan has him now for sure.
    But his Hair goes marching on...
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I think we need to reinstate that red, laughing "devil" smilie ...

    This one :naughty: doesn't quite cut it!
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Puzzler wrote: »
    I didn’t make Communion this morning ( no choir required) but the designated hymns were:
    Rejoice the Lord is king
    Before the throne of God above
    This joyful Eastertide
    Glorious things of thee are spoken

    Evensong
    Introit: This joyful Eastertide arr Ledger
    Responses: Smith
    Canticles: Vaughan Williams
    Anthem: Blessed be the God and Father- S. S. Wesley

    Hymns:
    New songs of celebration render- Rendez à Dieu
    All you who seek a comfort sure- St Bernard
    Ye choirs of new Jerusalem- St. Fulbert

    SS Wesley died 19th April 1876. Was the choice of anthem linked to this 150th anniversary?
  • Piglet wrote: »
    I think we need to reinstate that red, laughing "devil" smilie ...

    This one :naughty: doesn't quite cut it!

    If anyone can guess the second literary reference in my post, they win the internet for today.
    :grin:
  • Is this a reference to Roy Dotrice not being able to finish reading the audiobooks of "Game of Thrones"?
  • No. Guess again!
    It's a nod in the direction of M R James' ghost story Number 13, in which the Antiquary (observing mysterious goings-on in the room next to his) refers to Emily in The Mysteries...

    Apologies for silly tangent. Must get out more.
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited April 25
    Easter 4 at Our Place tomorrow, and the 100th anniversary of the dedication of the then newly-completed west end of the church:

    All people that on earth do dwell
    (Old Hundreth)
    Ye watchers and ye holy ones (Lasst Uns Erfreuen)
    The God of love my shepherd is (University)
    At the Lamb's high feast we sing (Salzburg)

    A fine selection IMNSHO. They are saving the St George's-tide nonsense for a Masonic Service in the afternoon (although even the handful of Faithful at Mass on St George's Day - last Thursday - had two 'suitable' hymns...).
  • God Has Spoken By His Prophets (Ebenezer)
    Immortal, Invisible (St. Denio)
    O For a Closer Walk With God (Belmont)
    God of Grace and God of Glory (Rhuddlan)
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Mostly a not too bad selection at St Pete's this morning:

    All creatures of our God and King - Lasst Uns Erfreuen
    Shall we gather at the river? - Hanson Place 🙄
    Father, hear the prayer we offer - Sussex
    God forgave my sin - Freely, Freely
    O Jesus, I have promised - Thornbury

    Could have been worse ...
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    4th Sunday of Easter

    At the lamb's high feast (Salzburg)
    I heard the voice (Kingsfold)
    Loving Shepherd (Buckland)
    You shall go out with joy (the NT Wright version - to Christchurch)

    Setting: Missa brevis Sancti Joannis de Deo - Haydn
    Anthem: My shepherd is the living Lord - Tomkins

    Organ: A fantasy (Tomkins) / A Fancy (Byrd)

    Some top Alto solo work in the anthem - really low tessatura, and beautifully sung.

    The 25 second Gloria in the Haydn mass setting is such fun - each part singing a different part of the gloria at the same time, and really really fast.....leaving more time later on for the soprano solo at the start of the benedictus.

    As eny ful nos the whole service needs to be under an hour...

    Heron
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I love the Sancti Joannis de Deo, and you're right - the Gloria is a corker! 🙂
  • Not a fan. It's perfunctory. The solo at the beginning of the Benedictus is beautiful though, I agree
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    We had:
    Let us build a house
    All things bright and beautiful
    What a friend we have in Jesus
    Longing for light
    Spirit of God unseen as the wind

    A fairly insipid selection, and I'm acquiring an antipathy towards LUBAH that others reserve for the shiny shiny song.

    Give me something meaty by Wesley, a J M Neale translation, a metrical psalm or a paraphrase, something!
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Fourth Sunday of Easter, sometimes known as Good Shepherd Sunday, at our place. We sang:

    “God Is Calling through the Whisper”/W ŻŁOBIE LEŻY
    “My Shepherd Will Supply My Need”/RESIGNATION
    “I the Lord of Sea and Sky” (“Here I Am, Lord”)/HERE I AM
    “Let Us Talents and Tongues Employ”/LINSTEAD


    And to my delight, the choir sang Howard Goodall’s “The Lord Is My Shepherd,” aka the theme from The Vicar of Dibley. :lol:


  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Not a fan. It's perfunctory. The solo at the beginning of the Benedictus is beautiful though, I agree

    It seriously disrespects the text. I'm amazed that it should be done in a service.
  • HeronHeron Shipmate
    Alan29 wrote: »
    Not a fan. It's perfunctory. The solo at the beginning of the Benedictus is beautiful though, I agree

    It seriously disrespects the text. I'm amazed that it should be done in a service.

    I can see that.

    I'd add that as we sing in Latin, the meaning isn't obscured any futher; the mood of the gloria is wholly appropriate for the Easter season; it's beautiful; everyone in the congregation has the full English text in front of them as the Latin is sung; people like it at Our Place.

    Heron
  • Jesus the Gate.

    “How pleased and blest was I” - Ascalon.
    “I will enter his gates with thanksgiving” (Leona Von Brethorst).
    “The Lord's my Shepherd, I'll not want” (Stuart Townend).
    “Loving Shepherd of your sheep” - Buckland.
    “All people that on earth do dwell” - Old Hundredth.
    “To God be the glory" - Usual W H Doane tune.


  • NenyaNenya All Saints Host, Ecclesiantics & MW Host
    We went back to our previous church last Sunday and attended both services.

    Early service:

    Praise to the Lord, the Almighty, the King of creation
    My hope is built on nothing less (Christ alone, Cornerstone)
    I love you, Lord, for your mercy never fails me
    I lift my eyes and see I need not be afraid

    Main service:

    God is good, God is good to us (with actions)
    Wonderful, so wonderful, is your unfailing love
    Ancient of Days
    You call me out upon the waters
  • Easter 5 at Our Place tomorrow:

    Hail, thou once despised Jesus (Lux Eoi or maybe Hyfrydol)
    Christ triumphant (Guiting Power)
    Christ, whose glory fills the skies (Ratisbon)
    Good Christians all, rejoice and sing (Vulpius)
  • Foaming DraughtFoaming Draught Shipmate
    edited May 3
    Eclectic rules!

    Praise the Name of Jesus

    We have heard the joyful sound, Jesus saves!

    My Jesus, my Saviour

    O the Mercy of God


    Then during communion, instead of saying Holy Holy Holy, we sang +Tim Dudley-Smith's

    Heavenly Hosts in Ceaseless Worship

    and instead of saying Blessing and Honour etc, we sang

    Blessing and Honour, Glory and Power, be unto the Ancient of Days

    Closed with Christ is made the Sure Foundation with the blessing coming between verse 3 and the doxology verse 4.

    Songs chosen for Ps 31 (I use the psalm as a Call to Worship) and 1 Peter 2:2-10 (which I preached on rather than the John 14 Gospel.)




  • Anna_BaptistAnna_Baptist Shipmate
    Praise Him! Praise Him! Jesus, our blessèd Redeemer! (Joyful Song)
    Jesus, the Name high over all (Miles Lane)
    Restore, O Lord (Graham Kendrick)
    Praise the Lord ye heavens adore Him (Austrian Hymn)

    The last one was a bit of a struggle as the congregation was unfamiliar with the words, but we got there by the end, and the LORD was praised.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    edited May 3
    Mostly quite a good sing today at St Pete's:
    Hail, thou once despisèd Jesus - Lux Eoi
    My Jesus, my saviour
    I Jesus, I have promised again, but this time to Day of Rest 🙄
    Jesu, lover of my soul - Aberystwyth
    Christ is made the sure foundation - Westminster Abbey :heart:
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited May 3
    A selection designed to make me happy at our place today (Easter 5):

    “I Greet Thee, Who My Sure Redeemer Art”/TOULON*
    “Be Not Afraid” (Taizé, J. Berthier)
    “Calm to the Waves”/CALM SEAS
    “I Heard the Voice of Jesus Say”/KINGSFOLD
    “God, Be the Love to Search and Keep Me” (“O Christ, Surround Me”)/GREEN TYLER


    *I know I’ve mentioned this before, but I’ll do so again, simply in furtherance of my wish that this hymn would become better known outside Reformed/Presbyterian churches. “I Greet Thee, Who My Sure Redeemer Art” appears to a reworking of an earlier Catholic hymn (the Salve Regina, or so it’s said), and it’s the one hymn often attributed to Calvin. While he probably didn’t write it, it was included in the 1545 Strasbourg Psalter and the 1551 Genevan Psalter, both published while Calvin was still living, and at least in Geneva, presumably with his approval.

    It’s a great text to a great tune.


  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    Mrs Spike and I are in Norwich this weekend, so went to the Eucharist at the cathedral this morning.

    The Mass setting was Ives, Missa Brevis. The anthem was I sat down under his shadow, Edward Bairstow.

    Hymns:
    Christ is the King Vulpius
    Thou art the way, by thee alone St James
    Praise to God whose word was spoken St Helen*
    All for Jesus All for Jesus**

    *Unfamilar words to a familiar tune
    **This stood out particularly as today is our wedding anniversary and this was one of the hymns we sang at the wedding
  • PuzzlerPuzzler Shipmate
    Parish Communion, Easter5.

    All my hope on God is founded - Michael
    Good Christians all, rejoice and sing- Gelob’t Sei Gott ( Vulpius)
    The Church’s one foundation - Aurelia
    Gifts of bread and wine ( Christine McCann)
    Thy hand O God has guided - Thornbury, all 6 verses.


    Nobody except the organist knew Gifts of bread and wine, but as it was the hymn during Communion, we got away with it.

    Mass of St Thomas.
  • Spike wrote: »
    Praise to God whose word was spoken St Helen*
    This also goes well to Regent Square.

  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Happy anniversary to the Spikes!

    It being the first Sunday of the month, we had Evensong:

    Usual chants for Mag & Nunc

    Psalm 30 - chant by Purcell

    Hymns:
    Father, who in Jesus found us - Quem Pastores
    Jerusalem the golden - Ewing
    Round me falls the night - Arnstadt

  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Puzzler wrote: »
    Parish Communion, Easter5.

    All my hope on God is founded - Michael
    Good Christians all, rejoice and sing- Gelob’t Sei Gott ( Vulpius)
    The Church’s one foundation - Aurelia
    Gifts of bread and wine ( Christine McCann)
    Thy hand O God has guided - Thornbury, all 6 verses.


    Nobody except the organist knew Gifts of bread and wine, but as it was the hymn during Communion, we got away with it.

    Mass of St Thomas.

    Gifts of Bread and wine was written in the 60s during the first flurry of doing English rather than Latin in the RCC, and should have died then. The tune is unbelievably dreary. I have no idea why the CofE with its superb body of hymns should be opting for such drivel.
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