Schmucke dich o liebe Seele - J.G. Walther
Messiah: "The Lord Gave the Word" - G.F. Handel
This Sanctuary of My Soul - Charles Wood
Hymns: #533 Lyons, #339 Schmucke dich,
#530 Gott Sei Dank
The music this week is German and English with Handel’s Messiah bridging the cultural gap. Two
of the three hymns are of German origin and the prelude and postlude are
settings of the German chorale tune Schmucke
Dich which is the offertory hymn. The anthems are The Lord Gave the Word written by the German born but England influenced
Handel; the communion anthem is by the British composer Charles Wood.
Schmucke dich o liebe
Seele is a German chorale tune written by Johann Crüger ( 1598-1662).
Cruger was one of the most important composers of his time. More than twenty of
his grand and stately hymn tunes remain in use. This set of three variations by
the German Baroque composer, Johann Gottfried Walther (1684-1748) exploits the
delicate nature of the text as well as the grandeur of the tune. The first two
variations are for manuals only. They sparkle with fluid running sixteenth
notes. The third variation places the tune in the left hand with florid
accompaniment in the right hand and scales in the pedal.
The gradual anthem was written by G.F. Handel (1685-1759) as
part of his monumental oratorio on the life of Christ, Messiah. This chorus is from Part II of the oratorio. It is sandwiched
between two arias in a section that deals with the dissemination of the gospel.
The piece alternates between a declamatory unison melody which the men start
the chorus with (it is later taken up by the women) and a light melismatic
section that spreads out from the unison the way that the gospel was spread.
The rapid but gradual movements suggest the energy with which the “company of
the preachers” went out to spread the gospel. Although this piece is short, it
paints an excellent image of the text that Handel is illustrating.
The communion anthem is a setting of a poem by Charles Hamilton
Sorley (1895-1915) a Scottish born poet that was considered to be one of the
most important poets of his time, and the greatest loss of all poets during
World War I. The text for This Sanctuary
of My Soul is taken from the last two stanzas of his poem Expectans Expectavi. This anthem by
Charles Wood (1866-1926) shows the marked difference in compositional styles
from the Victorian era composers to Wood and his contemporaries. Wood was a
student of C.V. Stanford and C.H.H. Parry and passed his compositional knowledge
on to his students Ralph Vaughan Williams and Herbert Howells. This anthem incorporates quickly changing
dynamics that illustrate all the ways that we can open ourselves to God be it
through meditation and prayer or acts of sacrifice large or small. This is to
be sung by those that are truly open to God’s will and are ready for all that
this may mean. It’s particularly poignant when the poet’s sacrifice is
considered. He died in combat in World War I.