Prelude: Kingsfold Te Deum, Sondra Tucker
The Prelude Sunday morning, Kingsfold Te Deum, will be offered by our Trinity handbell ringers. Both the KINGSFOLD (Hymn 292/480) and TE DEUM (Canticle 21) tunes are heard separately in the beginning, then together in the final stanza. A great festival piece! This will be the Trinity Ringers first time playing together in service again since before summer, so we are excited to have them back!
Processional Hymn: Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation/Westminster Abbey
The opening hymn Sunday morning is a very familiar hymn tune we know here at Trinity- Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation. The hymn tune was written by none other, Henry Purcell, who was perhaps the greatest English composer who ever lived, though he only lived to the age of thirty-six. The hymn tune, Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation, was translated in 1851 by John Mason Neale from the second part of the 6th- or 7th-century Latin monastic hymn Urbs beata Jerusalem.
Anthem: The Majesty and Glory of Your Name Tom Fettke
The Choir Anthem on Sunday is the classic by Tom Fettke. The text is based on the Psalm appointed for Sunday, Psalm 8. This anthem came out in the early 90's and has become a favorite and church choirs throughout the world. Fettke took the text by Linda Lee Johnson and married it with music that paints a perfect picture of creation and our place in it.
![]() |
Tom Fettke |
Here is a link to a story by Tom Fettke on the writing of this song.
https://marthagrimmbrady.com/2014/02/04/majesty-glory-name/
Be sure to listen to this arrangement sung on YouTube. It is different from most because it sung by an all male group, but I found it to be most helpful because it helped me focus on the words, not the instruments.
Closing Hymn: Hymn to Joy
![]() |
Beethoven |
The poem in the first version was composed of 9 stanzas of eight lines each and then reduced to 8 in the second version. Each verse is followed by a 4-line refrain, which is characterized as “chorus.”
It is well known throughout the World for having been used by Ludwig van Beethoven as a text of the choral part of the fourth and final movement of his Ninth Symphony. Micki was blessed to sing this with the Dallas Symphony in the early 90's!
Postlude: Concerto No II in a minor, Movement III, J.S Bach/Vivaldi
No comments:
Post a Comment