Music for April

Maundy Thursday 7pm Holy Communion

Setting

Byrd – Mass in four voices

Hymn

604, 494, 165, 422

Motet

Not unto us, O Lord (Walmisley)

Good Friday 2pm An hour at the cross

Readings, interspersed with movements from John Stainer’s Meditation on the Sacred Passion of the Holy Redeemer : The Crucifixion

Holy Saturday 9pm Easter Vigil

Membra Jesu Nostri (Seven cantatas by Dietrich Buxtehude)

Easter Sunday 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Missa in Tempore Alligatum (Girdlestone)

Hymn

205, 209, 221, 194

Motet

I know that my Redeemer liveth (Handel)

Sunday 12th 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Byrd – Mass in three voices (Gloria – Merbecke)

Hymn

217, 387, 207, 218

Motet

Not unto us, O Lord (Walmisley)

Sunday 19th 10.30am Holy Communion

Preces and responses

Richard Aylward

Psalm

133

Cantiles

Te Deum & Jubilate (Stanford in B flat)

Hymns

766, 394, 357, 578 (National Anthem)

Motet

O come, ye servants of the Lord (Tye)

Music Matters

April

As we are now firmly into Lent, we prepare ourselves for what is musically the most inspiring period of the liturgical calendar. We have already referenced the Bach St. John and St. Matthew Passions in these pages (both, particularly the latter, being absolute cornerstones), and this coming Saturday the Ristretto singers and I will be meeting for a day’s rehearsal in anticipation of Holy Week at St. Paul’s. Our morning will be spent looking at Membra Jesu Nostri by the Danish/North German baroque composer Dieterich Buxtehude, and the afternoon getting to grips with sections of John Stainer’s much appreciated Victorian cantata The Crucifixion.

Starting with the latter composer, who as a child prodigy rattled off Bach’s Fugue in E major on the organ at the age of seven, subsequently becoming a chorister and principal boy soloist at St. Paul’s Cathedral, we can clearly see that what goes around comes around. The young Stainer sang in the first English performance of the above-mentioned Bach St. Matthew Passion in 1854, the work which almost certainly inspired him to compose The Crucifixion 33 years later.

And working backwards, Bach was in his turn an enormous admirer of Buxtehude, travelling (apparently on foot!) from Arnstadt to Lübeck – a distance of over 400 kilometres – with the express purpose of visiting the senior composer from whom he learnt an enormous amount. Membra Jesu Nostri is an incontestable masterpiece – a series of seven short cantatas lasting just under an hour in toto, each depicting a body-part of the suffering and dying Christ on the Cross. The agony, although clearly palpable, is transformed into the most miraculously uplifting and inspiring work.

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