This one is also in CWB II, but as “Hark! a Herald Voice is Calling” and I blogged it here.
It is an Advent hymn with the text being Edward Caswell‘s translation of an ancient Latin hymn. Compared to yesterday’s cryptic crossword of a text, this one is perfectly clear. There are a lot of variations in the text and the one below is what is in the NLPHB.
This is another hymn set to AVE VIRGO VIRGINUM, but this is a new text to me.
That said it is very old: a translation of a C13 text by John Peckham, Archbishop of Canterbury – when they were still good Catholics – and translated by Ronald Knox only a century or so ago.
There is more variation than usual in the texts I have found and I have firstly given the words from this hymnal below. These lyrics are rather more convoluted than most hymn texts and require so much analysis to divine its meaning (something Eucharistic), that it hard to see how it can succeed as a hymn. Maybe it made more sense in Latin.
Nonetheless, I had yet another go at the tune and I think each time the organ backing is a little less annoying:
1 Hail, true Victim, life and light unto sinners lending;
Every older form and rite has in thee it’s ending.
Spotless in the Father’s sight evermore ascending,
Holy Church in bitter fight evermore befriending.
2 Hail true Manna from the sky, Israel never knew thee;
Pilgrims, for the day’s supply, daily homage do thee.
When our souls in sickness lie, yields that sickness to thee;
Christians, when they come to die, live immortal through thee.
3 Hail, Christ’s Body, gift he made, his own death forshowing,
(Godhead under earthly shade like a jewel glowing);
Sacred mem’ries, ne’er to fade, on his Church bestowing,
When to earth farewell he bade, to his passion going.
4 Plead, true Victim, in our stead to the Father crying,
Thou, thy children’s daily bread, daily health supplying.
Banquet for the exile spread, grant us life undying;
May our love from thine be fed, self and sense denying!
This is another commonly sited text:
1 Hail, true Victim, life and light Unto sinners lending, Ev’ry older form and rite Hath in Thee it’s ending. Spotless in the Father’s sight, Evermore ascending, Holy Church in bitter fight Evermore befriending.
2 Jesus, truly in this place, God and man resideth; Him no shadow doth replace, Him no rent divideth. Very flesh, although His face, Glorified, He hideth; Garnered in this little space All of Christ abideth.
3 Plead, true Victim, in our stead, To the Father crying, Thou, Thy children’s daily bread, Daily health supplying; Banquet for the exile spread, Grant us life undying: May our love from Thine be fed, Self and sense denying!
The New Living Parish Hymn Book from 1987 compiled and edited by John de Luca, is a collection of mostly traditional hymnary in use in Australian Catholic Church of that era, with many of de Luca’s own arrangements. They are especially of interest when he takes folk mass era hymns and gives them a more musical gloss. This is not one of those.
Even the traditional hymns I have already covered are worth another look, to give them better backings and some more background information.
I looked at this more than ten years ago from one of the music selections posted by Ryan, and he is still sending song lists after all these years, that give looking for song suggestions on this site a greater breadth.
Exemplifying the use of Protestant Hymnody by the Catholic Church when vernacular liturgy arrived, this is a text by Charles Wesley, here set to LLANFAIR by Welsh composer Robert Williams. It is even in CWB II.
It is a hymn for the Ascension. The text below is that found in this hymnal – many variants exist.
When I looked at this hymn previously, I made the mistake of thinking the setting I knew was the one all Catholics knew. Luckily, Mary at Godsongs let me know the wider picture.
Still, the New Living Parish Hymn Book selected REX as well, and so did The Australian Hymn Book, Together in Song and Gather Australia, so maybe it is at least the one used more in Australia.
The text is by Patrick Brennan (with a little bit of “alt” going on) and the setting, REX, is by William Henry Grattan Flood. It is a natural hymn for Christ the King. The text below is what is printed in the NLPHB.
I covered this C19 hymn in a desultory fashion once before here, but since my home parish is now Star of the Sea, George Town, Tasmania, I really should do a bit more. We are near the Bell Bay port and many seafarers pass us by and have done so for many years, so here is a prayer for those wanderers.
John Lingard’s text was inspired by the chant Ave Maria Stella. It is set to STELLA by Henri Freidrich Hemy, a gentleman who failed to make his way in Australia in the 1850s and had to settle for a return to England and fame as a musician.
I’m sure this song has more YouTube clips than any other hymn – I have a selection below.
This hymnal has John de Luca’s arrangement, but alas this backing I made is still just my fake BIAB organ.
1 Hail, Queen of heav’n, the ocean star, Guide of the wand’rer here below: Thrown on life’s surge, we claim thy care Save us from peril and from woe. Mother of Christ, Star of the sea, Pray for the wand’rer, pray for me.
2 O gentle, chaste, and spotless maid, We sinners make our prayers through thee; Remind thy Son that He has paid The price of our iniquity. Virgin most pure, star of the sea, Pray for the sinner, pray for me.
3 Sojourners in this vale of tears, To thee, blest advocate, we cry; Pity our sorrows, calm our fears, And sooth with hope our misery. Refuge in grief, star of the sea, Pray for the mourner, pray for me.
4 And while to him who reign above, In Godhead one, in Persons Three, The source of life, of grace, of love, Homage we pay on bended knee; Do thou, bright Queen, star of the sea, Pray for thy children, pray for me.
Goodness, this sheet music is in Eb – de Luca sensibly brought it down to C – thanks be to God.
Going through John de Luca’s New Living Parish Hymn Book is an introduction to me of some traditional Catholic Hymns that I have never come across before.
This one is a Lenten Eucharistic hymn with a C18 Italian text by St. Alphonsus Liguori (Viva! Viva! Gesu) translated by Frederick William Faber (C19) and here set to INNSBRUCK by Heinrich Isaac, a very old tune − early C16!
I made up chords based on the sheet music and made a backing:
1 Greet we this mystery yearly returning; Still does its history set our hearts burning; Gone are the former things, all shall be new again, Thoughts, words, actions be true again.
2 Christ in the sight of his brethren reclining On that last night of his, gave them for dining Bread where no leaven was, lamb that was slain for them, So did Moses ordain for them.
3 Thence this unaltering sacrifice fioweth; Still his unfaltering grace he bestoweth Where priests do consecrate, worthily taking it, Then to Christians breaking it.
4 Man makes repast in this banquet supernal; Shadows fade fast in this sunlight eternal; Wondrous our heritage, Lord, in receiving thee, Earth’s poor slaves — yet believing thee.
5 O gracious Trinity, fill, we implore thee, With thy Divinity hearts that adore thee; Dwelling in light, to that light bring us home again, From thy paths ne’er to roam again.
I did cover this song by Sister Anne Kelly in the Praise to God Parish Hymn book, but I warn you the backings I made there took the suggestion that is was a march a little too far.
This is a still a stirring entrance. John de Luca has made his own arrangement and made the chords more interesting as is his wont.
The New Living Parish Hymn Book had John de Luca’s own arrangement of PLAINSONG ADORE TE DEVOTE a C17 chant. He did the Latin version earlier as number seven in this hymn book.
The text is attributed to Thomas Aquinas (C13) as translated by Gerald Manley Hopkins C19), so we are in exalted company.
The fake BIAB organ backing I made is my fault and no reflection on de Luca’s arrangement.
1. Godhead here in hiding, whom I do adore Masked by these bare shadows, shape and nothing more, See, Lord, at thy service low lies here a heart Lost, all lost in wonder at the God thou art.
2. Seeing, touching, tasting are in thee deceived; How says trusty hearing? that shall be believed; What God’s Son hath told me take for truth I do; Truth himself speaks truly, or there’s nothing true.
3. On the Cross thy Godhead made no sign to men; Here thy very manhood steals from human ken; Both are my confession, both are my belief, And I pray the prayer of the dying thief.
4. I am not like Thomas, wounds I cannot see, But can plainly call thee Lord and God as he; This faith each day deeper faith be my holding of, Daily make me harder hope and dearer love.
5. O thou our reminder of Christ crucified, Living Bread, the life of us for whom he died, Lend this life to me then; feed and feast my mind, There be thou the sweetness man was meant to find.
6. Jesu, whom I look at shrouded here below, I beseech thee send me what I thirst for so, Some day to gaze on thee face to face in light And be blest for ever with thy glory’s sight. Amen.
I've worked my way through the As One Voice books and other collections making backings on Band in a Box to help me (& you if you're interested) learn new songs for church. This is aimed at churches and musicians that own the collections but haven't exploited them fully. If you don't have them they are certainly worth buying. This site is educational, nonprofit and designed to enhance the commercial prospects of songwriters. This site does not distribute copyrighted sheet music.
Disclaimer
Any opinions expressed here are personal views and not the responsibility of any Church.
All music backings posted are created by myself and the intention is for them to be used to learn the songs. If any copyright holder wishes me to cease publicising and promoting their wares and directing people to where sheet music can be legally purchased please let me know.
Mason’s “Mass of Glory and Praise”
To access my backings for Paul Mason's mass go to Feb 2011 in the archive.