Archive for the 'Choir' Category

Music and Meditations for the Advent Season

Monday, December 1st, 2008
December 6, 2008
7:30 pmto8:30 pm

Join us for a contemplative evening of Advent readings and music on Saturday, December 6 at 7:30 PM. The service will include Taizé music and Advent hymns, and a beautiful new altarpiece designed by artist-in-residence Angela Wales Rockett and painted by members of the congregation.

Performers this evening include:

What is Advent?
Advent 2008

Choral Evensong for the Feast of Hildegard of Bingen

Sunday, May 25th, 2008
September 13, 2008
7:30 pmto8:30 pm

Illumination from the Liber Scivias showing Hildegard

Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, Kenmore invites you to a Choral Evensong service on Saturday, September 13 at 7:30 PM to celebrate the Feast of Hildegard of Bingen. The music for this evening will consist of music by Hildegard and pieces composed using her texts, to be performed by the women of the Redeemer Choir and violinist Laurie Kempen under the direction of Sheila Bristow.

Map and driving directions

Listen to Hildegard’s music at Last.fm

About Hildegard of Bingen (from Wikipedia):

Hildegard of Bingen (1098 – 17 September 1179), also known as Blessed Hildegard and Saint Hildegard, was a German abbess, artist, author, counselor, linguist, naturalist, scientist, philosopher, physician, herbalist, poet, activist, visionary, and composer. Elected a magistra in 1136, she founded the monasteries of Rupertsberg in 1150 and Eibingen in 1165.

She is the first composer with an extant biography. One of her works, the Ordo Virtutum, has been called the first form, and possibly the origin, of opera.

She wrote theological, botanical, and medicinal texts, as well as letters, liturgical songs, poems, and the first surviving morality play, while supervising brilliant miniature illuminations.

Attention in recent decades to women of the medieval church has led to a great deal of popular interest in Hildegard, particularly of her music. Approximately eighty compositions have survived, which is one of the largest repertoires among medieval composers.

Hildegard communicated with popes such as Eugene III and Anastasius IV, statesmen such as Abbot Suger, German emperors such as Frederick I Barbarossa, and other notable figures such as Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.

Many abbots and abbesses asked her for prayers and opinions on various matters. She traveled widely during her four preaching tours, the only woman to have done so during the Middle Ages.

Music for Holy Week and Resurrection Sunday 2008

Friday, March 21st, 2008

Maundy Thursday:

The choir will sing a haunting setting of Psalm 78 by Seattle composer Peter Hallock, and two settings of Canticle N, “A Song of God’s Love”.

Good Friday:

The gentlemen of the choir will sing a close-harmony arrangement of “Were You There” by noted African American composer/arranger H. T. Burleigh.

The Great Paschal Vigil:

Festive Easter music by the choir, and guest trumpeter Judson Jay Scott will perform solos by Hovhanness and Telemann.

The Sunday of the Resurrection:

  • Two solos from Handel’s Messiah:
  • “I know that my Redeemer liveth”, with soprano Christina Siemens
  • “The trumpet shall sound”, with baritone Glenn Guhr and Judson Jay Scott, trumpet
  • Also, the choir will sing one of Vaughan Williams’ Five Mystical Songs, and organist Sheila Bristow will provide a festive prelude by J. S. Bach.

Advent Lessons and Carols

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Saturday December 8th, 7:30 PM

This meditative service of readings and music provides a time of reflection and renewal during the season of Advent. Solo and choral music provided by the Church of the Redeemer Choir, mezzo soprano Melissa Plagemann, and violinist Stephen Cresswell.

The service will be followed by a dessert reception.

Holy Week at Redeemer is not for the weak

Thursday, April 5th, 2007

Holy Week at Redeemer is not for the weak–especially if you are in charge of the music program! At the end of the service on Palm Sunday I was reminded of an article in the American Guild of Organists’ magazine which listed old newspaper accounts of organists who had died on Easter morning, often in dramatic ways. However, I’m sure an extra trip to Starbucks will be all I need after Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, The Great Paschal Vigil…and, lest we forget, midnight champagne reception!

Thankfully, my energy is matched and rewarded by the choir and instrumentalists involved in the liturgies. The services and community life at Redeemer have such amazing contrasts during this period:

Lenten fasting
communal meals

solemn processions
the joyful pageantry of children

choir families in difficult times
vibrant, focused singing

the darkest psalms
the brightest hymns.

I look forward to sharing these ever more deeply as we move into Holy Week.

In the words of a hymn we’ll sing tomorrow night from Wonder, Love, and Praise:

Draw us to you and with your love transform us:
the love we’ve seen, the love we’ve touched and known;
enlarge our hearts and with compassion fill us
to love, to serve, to follow you alone.

(”You laid aside your rightful reputation”, Rosalind Brown)

–Sheila

Saturday, February 3rd - Choral Evensong (Candlemas)

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Saturday evening’s Choral Evensong will be a 7:30 PM service with Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, celebrating the Presentation of Jesus at the Temple.

  • Choral Processional : Allunde Alluya (Traditional)
  • Choral Introit: We Have Waited in Silence (Sheila Bristow)
  • Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament: When Candles Are Lighted
  • Choral Psalm 122 Anglican Chant (James Turle)
  • Choral Canticle: Nunc Dimittis (Charles Villers Stanford)
  • Canticle: Magnificat (Hymnal 437)
  • Benediction: A Song of Judith (Michael Sitton)

Three musical responses to the Nativity

Sunday, December 17th, 2006

December is an interesting time to be a church music director. As of this evening, I still do not know whether we will have power for the service tomorrow (which means no organ…or heat or lights, probably even more important!) I will leave early tomorrow morning, bundled up in sweaters, ready to tune the harpsichord and brilliantly substitute another anthem for the choir, depending on who makes it in and what instruments (if any) are usable. At a concert this evening another musician was speaking hopefully of snow tonight, and I nearly started screaming…a huge windstorm is enough for one week!

While the weather is beyond my control, I’m pleased to have finally finished planning music for the 9:00 pm Eucharist on Christmas Eve. It’s a complicated convergence: a very public service which commemorates a very intimate event; and a distractingly large wealth of repertoire from which to choose pieces which must fit within the practical boundaries of rehearsal time, service length, and parish resources.

One of my guidelines in choosing music for the choir is Fr. John’s insistence that we keep Advent and Christmas seperate from the frenzied pace and expectations of secular culture. I decided to focus on three responses to the Nativity:

1) AWE: the mystery of the incarnation

There’s nothing more countercultural than plainchant! For the introit, I found a beautiful and unusual piece in “Voices Found”, a hymnal which features texts and music by women. “O mundi domina” is by 15th century composer and poet Magyar Gregorianum, and I love the last line in particular:

“…he lies in the crib, who rules the stars.”

2) JOY: at the darkest time of year, we rejoice in new life

The anthem “Gaudete” is a contemporary arrangement of a tune from 1582. The Latin refrain features a lively dance-like rhythm, with particular insistence on the title word (”rejoice”).

3) SWEETNESS: the bond of mother and child

Two anthems at communion reflect on this picture: the Tudor-period “Lute-Book Lullaby” by William Ballet, and a setting of the 15th cent. anonymous poem “I sing of a maiden that is makeless”. Many composers have used the latter text, including Benjamin Britten in his famous “Ceremony of Carols”. I’ve chosen a 1937 setting by Charles F. Waters which has a peculiarly English pastoral quality, well-suited to the text. While he only used half of the poem, the whole thing is a lovely read. Here’s a version from the Oxford Book of English Verse:

I sing of a maiden that is makeless [matchless]:
King of all kinges to her son she ches [chose].

He came all so stille there his mother was
As dew in Aprille that falleth on the grass.

He came all so stille to his mother’s bower
As dew in Aprille that falleth on flower.

He came all so stille there his mother lay
As dew in Aprille that falleth on the spray.

Mother and maiden was never none but she;
Well may such a lady Goddes mother be.

***

Many thanks to the choir from their hard work this season, and I look forward to joining them in sharing this wonderful music with the Redeemer community. (And for those singers not in the choir: remember to come early for the carol sing at 8:30!)

Cheers, Sheila

Advent Lessons and Carols on Saturday, December 2nd at 7:30 PM

Monday, November 27th, 2006

Join us for a contemplative and joyous service featuring:

  • Prophetic readings
  • Seasonal hymns and anthems
  • Solos from Handel’s “Messiah”
  • New Advent art on display

Lessons and Carols

Genesis 3:1-15 (Adam and Eve rebel against God and are cast out of the Garden of Eden)

Hymn 60 - Creator of the stars of night

Isaiah 40:1-11 (God comforts his people and calls on them to prepare for redemption)

Comfort ye my people - Georg Frideric Handel

Every valley shall be exalted

  • Samuel Rodarte, tenor

Jeremiah 31:31-34 (A new covenant is promised which will be written on our hearts)

Song of Ezekiel - Monte Mason

Isaiah 6:1-11 (God reveals his glory to the prophet and calls him to be his messenger)

Hymn 69 - What is the crying at Jordan?

Isaiah 11:1-9 (The Spirit of the Lord will rest on the Holy One)

The Lord will come and not be slow - Henry G. Ley

Zephaniah 3:14-18 (The Lord will be among us; we are summoned to rejoice and sing)

Hymn 71 - Hark! the glad sound!

Luke 1:5-25 (An angel announces to Zechariah that his wife Elizabeth will bear a son)

Song of Zechariah - Richard Fabian

Choral Evensong on Saturday, November 25th

Monday, November 6th, 2006

Saturday, November 25th - Choral Evensong, Christ the King Eve

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament