You Are Near (AOV 1/112)

This is Dan Schutte’s very popular song that is now wrong because it says the “Yahweh” word. He writes perceptively about the problem here and the revised text is here. It sings better with the original text.

It can be purchased for download at OCP.

You can hear it with organ and choir here and I suspect this is the original.

I think we have stopped using it although it was in high rotation for a long time. There are subtle differences in the melody between the verses, which we have always completely ignored.

Refrain

Yahweh, I know you are near,
standing always at my side.
You guard me from the foe,
and you lead me in ways ever-lasting.

Verse 1
Lord, you have searched my heart,
and you know when I sit and when I stand.
Your hand is upon me protecting me from death,
keeping me from harm.
Refrain

Verse 2
Where can I run from your love?
If I climb to the heavens you are there;
if I fly to the sunrise or sail beyond the sea,
still I’d find you there.

Refrain

Verse 3
You know my heart and its ways,
you who formed me before I was born
in the secret of darkness before I saw the sun
in my mother’s womb.

Refrain

Verse 4
Marvelous to me are your works;
how profound are your thoughts, my Lord.
Even if I could count them, they number as the stars,
you would still be there.

Refrain

© Daniel Schutte and NALR 1971.

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Gather Us Together (AOV 1/111)

Owen Alstott is an OCP composer who wrote this song, which is obviously a song of gathering, but also with application for Eucharist.  He is Bernadette Farrell’s husband – isn’t it great for a man to be the less famous composer for a change.

It can be purchased for download at OCP.

You can hear an organ + voice version here.  The original can be heard here. It is quiet and reflective so if that’s what you’re after in a gathering song this is the one.

My backing starts to miss notes in the later verses so just use it for learning purposes. BIAB was misbehaving for some reason.

Refrain

Lord, Jesus Christ, gather us together.
Make us one bread, one body in your love.

VERSE 1

Gather your people, who long to be one,
One with you, O Lord, in truth and love.

Refrain

VERSE 2

We do proclaim you the Savior of all,
Lord of all the earth and sea and sky.

Refrain

VERSE 3

Forgive our failings, create us anew.
Speak your words of peace into our hearts.

Refrain

VERSE 4

Into your hands, Lord, we place all our cares,
Trusting in your name, which never fails.

Refrain

VERSE 5

Within your temple your praises we sing.
Glorious is your name o’er all the earth.

Refrain

© OCP Publications 1980.

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Strong and Constant (AOV 1/110)

This is a very used song by Fr Frank Andersen.  It falls foul of the Yahweh rule and the singing in God’s voice rule, but it is beloved by many and you couldn’t kill it off with a stake through its heart. This organist is really going for it but the assembly is somewhere else. This piano version is more basic and may have been easier to sing along to. In fact this song is so well known it is an excellent one to sing without musical backing for at least one verse and chorus.

Verse 1

I will be Yahweh who walks with you!

You will be always within my hand!

Take your heart and give it all to me!

Refrain

Strong and constant is my love!

Strong and constant is my love!

Verse 2

Should you wander far away from me,

I will search for you in ev-’ry  land!

Should you call, then you will truly know:

Refrain

Verse 3

When you know sorrow within your life,

I will come I will embrace your heart!

Through your pain you will discover me!

Refrain

© Frank Andersen and Chevalier Music.

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First Sunday of Advent and Second Sunday of Lent (AOV 1/108-9)

These are the late Br Colin Smith’s Psalm responses for the first week of advent and the second sunday of Lent.  AOV also gives the tones for the chant of the verses. He wrote psalm settings for the whole three year cycle but is probably most famous for his Mass Shalom that Paul Mason has recently revised.

Do read the obituary he wrote for himself here. His pet joke was apparently:

Q: What’s the difference between a liturgist and a terrorist?

A: You can negotiate with a terrorist.

To you I lift my soul, O God.

 

The Lord is my light, my light and my salvation.

© Colin Smith

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Send Forth Your Spirit, O Lord (AOV 1/107)

This setting of Ps 104 is by Christopher Walker. You can hear the original here and view a sample of the sheet music here. It’s gets high in verse 3 but there are lower harmony notes for groaners like myself helpfully included in the version of the music I have. It can be purchased for download at OCP.

I think I prefer Angotti’s setting in AOV NG and there are lots of other settings for this psalm, but see what you think.

Refrain

Send forth your Spirit, O Lord,

And renew the face of the earth. (x2)

Verse 1

Bless the Lord O my soul,
O Lord how great you are!
How many are your works, O Lord,
The earth is full of your riches!

Verse 2

You take back your Spirit, they die
Back to the dust from which they came;
You send forth your Spirit, they are created,
The whole earth is renewed!

Verse 3

Your glory will last forever,
May you rejoice in all your works.
May my thoughts be pleasing to you,
I find my joy in you Lord.

© Christopher Walker 1984, 1985.

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Dona Nobis Pacem (AOV 1/106)

BIAB takes on Mozart with predictable results. Better to listen to a string quartet and soloist here.  … or with these ladies as a round.

This poster took the trouble to enter each line as a round. I didn’t.

 

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Cantemos al Senor

This isn’t from AOV at all, but a parishioner has found it and liked it so we are singing it this week at mass as the psalm.  Carlos Rosas who wrote it is in the OCP stable. I initially thought she wanted us to sing in Spanish but there are English lyrics as well.

This Chinese choir sing it nicely, I think in Chinese. For an accordian version follow this link. My backing is MIDI style BIAB.

Verse 1

Let’s sing unto the Lord a hymn of glad rejoicing.

Let’s sing a hymn of love, joining hearts and happy voices.

God made the sky above, the stars, the sun, the oceans.

Their goodness does proclaim the glory of God’s name.
Refrain

A – le – lu – ia!    A – le – lu – ia!

Let’s sing unto the Lord.   A – le – lu   –   ia!

 

Verse 2

Let’s sing unto the Lord a hymn of adoration,

Express unto the Lord our song of faith and hope.

Creation’s broad display proclaims the work of grandeur,

The boundless love of One who blesses us with beauty.

Refrain

Let’s sing unto the Lord.

A – le – lu   –   ia!

 

          en Español

Can – te – mos  al  Se – ñor  un  him – no  de_a – le – grí – a,

un  cán – ti – co  de_a – more  al  na – cer  el  nue – vo  dí – a.

El  hi – zo_el  cie – lo_el  mar,  el  so  y  las  es – tre – llas

y  vio_en  e – llos  bon – dad,  pues  sus o – bras  e – ran  be – llas.

Estribillo

¡A – le – lu – ia!  ¡A – le – lu – ia!

Can – te – mos  al  Se – ñor.  ¡A – le – lu   –   ia!

 

Can – te – mos  al  Se – ñor  un  him – no  de_a – la – ban – za

que_ex – pre – se  nues – tro_a – mor, nues – tra  fe_y nues – tra_es – per – ran – za.

En  to – da  la  crea – ción  pre – go – na  su  gran – de – za,

a – sí  nues – tro  can – tar  va_a – num – cian – do  su  be – lle – za.
Estribillo

 

Can – te – mos  al  Se – ñor.

¡A – le – lu      –   ia!

© Carlos Rosas

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Mass for a Pilgrim People by Peter Grant

This is another of the masses that were bought by our parish in search of settings to use locally.  Peter Grant is an Australian composer and this mass is part of As One Voice’s Liturgical series.  There are samples of these masses in no particular order at the AOV site here.  There are all worth a listen but do go and hear what Peter’s mass is supposed to sound like with piano and voice.

Since if I can convince anyone locally to do this mass next year it will be on guitar, I’ve used guitar based backings on BIAB to create my backings for the mass. While the backings are all computer based I have strummed these through and they are quite playable and singable to.

I’m not doing the Kyrie nor Our Father because we don’t sing them but do listen to the Lord Have Mercy in the samples as it is quite lovely.

The Glory to God is 6/8 and starts with 2 Glory’s before the refrain, which is a nice touch. I’ve done it on Trumpet first, then the vocal line before starting the refrain the first time.  Even with a repeated refrain and a prolonged amen it clocks in under 3 minutes.  It has a memorable chorus and navigates the clumsy text with aplomb with repeating melodic motifs that link similar lines in the text. The transition from chorus to verse is a little breathless but I’m sure manageable. My backing doesn’t give you the right dynamics for the full dramatic impact but, as always, may work for learning purposes.

The Gospel Acclamation follows the style of the Gloria and allows for a chant of the appropriate verse before a repeat.  Since that can’t be done in BIAB I’ve just done the acclamation.

For the Holy, Holy, Holy, Grant switches to a 4/4 motif that goes through into the Lamb of God, and is in the Kyrie as well.  He puts in a long rising crescendo on “hosts” before his party trick, two descending triplets with the words returning (Heaven and earth) on the second triplet. The triplets are repeated for “Blessed is he” again with the words coming in on the second triplet.  I’ve put a piano line in the backing so you can hear what he is up to, but it is an original and effective device.

We use the “When We Eat This Bread” acclamation, so that’s the one I’ve done. This is 4/4 but more forceful than the Sanctus. He repeats “until you come again.”

The Great Amen returns to the 6/8 of the Gloria.

The Lamb of God is minor key version of the style of the Holy Holy with the triplet trick pulled off again.  It also manages to be long enough that it won’t need repeating for your priest to finish all the liturgical business he wants done at this time. He repeats the “have mercy”

This mass is eminently playable, even on guitar, has memorable hooks and nuance. (perhaps not noticeable in my backings) For those who were sorry the revised Mass of Freedom was such a disappointment, this mass can have the same flow but with a lighter dancing touch. This one might have legs and it is certainly worth going to the AOV site and buying a full copy to try it out yourself.

 

 

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Behold the Cross (AOV 1/105)

This is Bob Hurd’s entry into the Good Friday Adoration of the Cross stakes. You can hear his lovely version here. I wonder if it works better as a solo, which is really OK because it is a situation where you may not want the assembly singing necessarily for a change. On the hand these kids do a nice enough job.

It is available to purchase for download at OCP.

We have a fairly set list of songs we have done for years on Good Friday but we never have done this one and I think we should consider it for next Easter.

Verse 1

Behold the cross on which was hung
life’s very Lord, God’s only Son;
Mary’s own babe, so cold and so still,
helpless before her on Calvary hill.

Verse 2

Nails in his hands, nails in his feet,
a traitor kiss upon his cheek;
and his pierced heart, now broken in two,
love crucified for me and for you.

Verse 3

Eyes that won’t see, ears that won’t hear,
lips that deny the friend once so dear;
slowly he turns and captures your eye,
then passes on to Calv’ry to die.

Verse 4

Behold the cross of Christ in our midst:
all those who bear his wounds in their flesh.
Suff’ring for crimes of mercy and peace,
signs of the kingdom on Calvary street.

Verse 5

Behold the cross on which was hung
life’s very Lord, God’s only Son;
Mary’s own babe, so cold and so still,
helpless before her on Calvary hill.

© Bob Hurd 1986, 1990

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Blessings on the King (AOV 1/104)

Michael Lynch, who wrote this song is part of the OCP stable. He wrote the more famous (around these parts anyway), “Bread , Blessed and Broken”, but much more importantly he is Ukelele Mike Lynch, which makes him all things important and wonderful in the world. (gotta love ukes) Listen to the snippet on AOV to get the idea. The text is Matt 21 and, yes, it does appear to have been written for schoolchildren, but that does not mean it has no other use.  Each verse has a liturgical use, eg Palm Sunday, Easter, Christmas etc and rather than sing the whole song, I suspect picking the appropriate verse is the best idea.

I wish I’d known this earlier that he was Ukelele Mike, because this song might have sounded better with a ukelele backing. Instead I just build more instruments each verse, but, if nothing else, the backing may help you learn the song. I set it at 130 bpm.

 

Refrain

Hosanna! Hosanna! Blessings on the King!

Hosanna! Hosanna! Son of God, we sing!

Hosanna! Hosanna! Blessings on the King!

We praise you, we bless you, our gifts to you we bring.

 

Verse 1

Your people are gathered on this holy day,

To lay down before you, branches on your way.

We sing of your glory as you enter in.

Come now, Lord Jesus, wash away our sin.

 

Refrain

Verse 2

O Lord, you are King now, King of all the earth.

The stars in the heavens shine on our rebirth.

Your death and your rising gives to us new life.

No longer in darkness, now we have your light.

 

Refrain

Verse 3

You are our brother, brother and friend,

Sent by the Father, all our hearts to mend.

We pray now, Lord Jesus, as you come today.

Please guide us with you as you go your way.

 

Refrain

Verse 4

The meek and the lowly gather now to sing;

To sing out their praises to the humble King.

Your is the Kingdom of peace and joy and love.

The Father has sent us His Spirit from above.

 

Refrain

© Raven Music 1976, 1982.

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