Music for March

Sunday 2nd 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Missa in Tempore Alligatum (Girdlestone)

Hymn

2, 809, 595, 453

Motet

Panis Angelicus (Franck)

Wednesday 5th 6pm Holy Communion

Setting

Byrd – Mass for Three Voices

Hymn

118, 121

Motet

Parce Domine (Obrecht)

Sunday 9th 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Merbecke

Hymns

121, 116, 357, 593

Motet

Ave Regina (Gounod)

Sunday 16th 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Merbecke

Hymns

135, 298, 644, 128 

Motet

An Irish Blessing

Sunday 23rd 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Batten – Short Communion Service

Hymns

131, 118, 746, 784 

Motet

Come Holy Ghost (Attwood)

Wednesday 26th 7pm Choral Evensong

Canticles

Stanford in B flat and G

Hymns

584

Psalms

119 vs. 145-152

Responses

Ayleward

Anthem

Ave Maris Stella (Grieg) 

Sunday 30th 10.30am Holy Communion

Setting

Darke in F

Hymns

394, 545, 537, 676 

Motet

If ye love me (Tallis)

Music Matters

As Lent approaches - by Errol Girdlestone

As Lent approaches, the St. Paul’s congregation will be singing the Missa in Tempore Alligatum on Sunday 2nd March for the last time until Easter. Instead we will be confining ourselves to the more sober setting by John Merbecke  c.1510 – c. 1585. 

 Initially a boy chorister, and then organist at St. George’s Chapel Windsor, Merbecke became a significant English choral composer and theological writer who lived through dangerous times. Having been convicted of heresy he was sentenced to be burnt at the stake, only to receive a last-minute pardon, thanks to the intervention of the then Bishop of Winchester, Stephen Gardiner, who declared Merbecke to be “but a musitian”. The spelling doesn’t do much to mitigate the apparent disdain in which we in the profession are held, but I suppose, given the context, we should all be grateful to be alive! 

In 1550 Merbecke published his Booke of Common Praier Noted which was intended to provide musical uniformity in the use of the Prayer Book. Despite the multitude of changes in the lIturgy since then, Merbecke’s setting provides an anchor point for congregational singing during the service of Holy Communion to this day. The style is a cross between Gregorian chant and semi-rhythmical melodies which are easy to latch onto, providing a context free of period associations – neither ancient nor modern, ie timeless. 

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