Church Music

Evermore and Evermore

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Sometimes, days seem to last forever. Sometimes, things don’t come together like I think they should. Sometimes, I let myself get beaten down by people who criticize what I do. Sometimes, I get lost in the bulletins, the extra rehearsals, the folders of music, and the long staff meetings. Sometimes, I’m not very good at showing grace.

The choir is diligently working on a gorgeous arrangement (Jay Rouse, for all you choir directors out there) of one of my most favorite Christmas hymns – “Of the Father’s Love Begotten” (listen here).  Although we spent rehearsal worrying over notes, struggling with the 6/4 meter, and dealing with quick page turns, I was reminded of the power behind these words and the reason for which we are singing when I re-read the text:

Of the Father’s love begotten,
Ere the worlds began to be,
He is Alpha and Omega,
He the source, the ending he;
Of the things that are, that have been,
And that future years shall see,
Evermore and evermore!

Before the world began, He was.  He knows my past, my present, and my future.  He is the source of life.

O ye heights of heaven adore him;
Angel hosts, his praises sing;
Powers, dominions, bow before him,
And extol our God and King;
Let no tongue on earth be silent,
Every voice in concert ring,
Evermore and evermore!

What else can we do but sing His praises?  Let no tongue on earth be silentlet every voice sing out!

Christ, to thee with God the Father,
And, O Holy Ghost, to thee,
Hymns and chant and high thanksgiving,
And unwearied praises be;
Honor, glory, and dominion,
And eternal victory,
Evermore and evermore!

As much as I try to change my expectations . . . people still disappoint me.
As much as I try to be prepared at all times . . . I will never know exactly what the future holds.
As much as I try to hold back . . . I still find myself saying the wrong things at the wrong time.
As much as I try to be professional in what I do . . . people will still find reason to criticize me.

And yet, we are called to let our praises be unwearied amidst our weariness.  To Him be honor, glory, dominion, and eternal victory – victory over the things I say, victory over the actions I take, victory over the people who try to discourage me, victory over me.

What an overwhelming sense of peace this brings to my heart tonight as I write.  Wishing you this type of peace this season.

Image Credit: personal

A Day in the Life

I am a freelance musician and largely self-employed.  I have five part-time jobs, all in music.  Christmas is the busiest time of the year.  What does a “normal” work day look like?  Let me give you a little glimpse!  Tuesdays are generally a balance of church work, private teaching, and a little administrative work for some of my other professional work and yesterday was no exception!  This was my day:

*            *            *            *            *

8:45-9:30 a.m.: catch-up with emails, editing, run/walk down to the church

9:30-10 a.m.: worship planning meeting with the pastor (we have six services on our plates right now!)

10 a.m.-12 p.m.: staff meeting regarding last Sunday and this Sunday

12-12:15 p.m.: formatting for this Sunday’s and next Sunday’s bulletins

12:15-1:00 p.m.: children’s choir planning meeting with the C.E. Director

1-1:30 p.m.: walk home, lunch, Post Office run (our midday walk), dry cleaning

1:30-4:30 p.m.: emails, update WCMW Concert Calendar, paperwork, pay bills, more editing, research

4:30-5:30 p.m.: walk to church, teach piano lessons

5:30-6:15 p.m.: file Sanctuary Choir music from Sunday, organize my music for the next few weeks of services, practice music for Sunday

6:15-7:00 p.m.: teach piano lessons, coach duet

7-7:30 p.m.: straighten up the Sanctuary, walk home, skim Christmas catalogs (J.Crew red leather gloves, anyone?), catch up with SD

7:30-8 p.m.: dinner+glass of chardonnay

8-8:30 p.m.: wash/dry the dishes, run to Vincent’s for cookies (we are so spoiled having a grocery store across the street!)

8:30-9 p.m.: take a break, watch The Office

9-10:45 p.m.: write, send/respond to emails, make lists for tomorrow, work on Christmas presents!

Cracked Wide Open

Do you know those times when you feel like your head is in a million places? 

You're so busy trying to keep all 10 plates spinning that you're not really 100% present and that responsibility, that weight feels like the weight of the world upon your shoulders.

Can you relate? If so, I have a story for you.


We had a busy weekend.

I spent six hours in the car on Saturday (dropping Steve off for a weekend away, picking up my dress in CT, and running a few last-minute wedding errands: who knew chalkboards were so hard to find?). 

The weight of Sunday morning began to set in. 

I stocked my night table with a box of tissues and cough drops (battling a cold since the middle of last week) and bought an extra alarm clock, just to be safe.  Good thing I thought to take it out of the box before going to bed — another trip out to buy AAA batteries.

Sunday morning, 6:45 a.m., neither alarm sounded.  Thankfully, my night was restless and I was awake anyway. 

I dressed for the foggy, cool morning, grabbed a coke, and ran out the door at 7:45 a.m. 

To-do:

  • run-through music

  • pick up chairs in Choir Room

  • make a seating chart for the children's choir

  • rehearse

At 8:45 a.m., I had four of the twelve children I was expecting to sing. 

At 9:00 a.m., I had half of the adult choir I expected. 

We started rehearsing nonetheless.  A few more faces joined the group and panic set in as they realized Steve (their unofficial "leader") was not there.  After a 60-second counseling session ("really, y'all will be just fine"), they were on their way.

I took my seat at the piano and waited for the announcements. 

Are the choir members leaving enough room for latecomers?  Are they being quiet? 

Lifting my hands to the keyboard for the prelude, I saw the pastor stand up and make his way to the center.  I scrambled to change books when I realized he was skipping ahead.  No worries, crisis averted. 

And so we proceeded:

Gathering Song
Call to Worship
Opening Hymn: four verses, melody on the swell manual for verse 3. It's just one wrong note — let it go.
Passing of the Peace: old language in the bulletin — remember to fix that in staff meeting. Don't slip running down to the piano!
Scripture readings
Time with the Children: will that children's choir member remember that we're singing today since he missed the rehearsal?
Combined anthem (three choirs): it's worth the split-second pause to make sure the page is turned Meditation: why is my contact so blurry? Will I have to play the rest of the service with one eye closed?
Middle Hymn: three verses, adjust melody second time through based on how the congregation is singing it Joys/Concerns: a moment of panic when all eyes turn to me with the announcement of our wedding next weekend
Lord's Prayer (sung)
Offertory
Doxology
Offertory Prayer: bolt to organ for Closing Hymn — no time to hesitate, play introduction, hear whispers, see people sit down, read the word, "Communion!" on choir members' lips.  (This prayer is new in the communion service and for over a year it's been my cue to run to the organ.  So, I heard the prayer, and I ran to the organ.  Completely blind once I’m back there, I completely skipped the communion portion of the service.) Skulk back down to the piano. Bread, music (wait for the pastor), cup, music (wait for the pastor), prayer: dash to the organ
Closing Hymn: four verses, make sure choir leaves on verse 2 after the deacons have extinguished the candles Benediction: dash to the piano
Benediction Response: who is talking in the back of the church?
Postlude


Cracked. wide. open. 

Do you know how that feels?  Do you know how hard it is to not let yourself fall apart but instead, to pick up your broken self and keep going?  I suddenly felt much sicker than I really was.  Foggy lightheadedness felt like it could just consume me.  But I had to keep going. 

It's not that I expect perfection — I know things can never be perfect.  I strive to be invisible in worship, to be an instrument, per se.  I want the music to speak for itself and I don't want to do anything that detracts from that.

Yesterday, as hard as it was to come out from behind the organ to play the rest of the service — broken and embarrassed, I managed.  I struggled with showing grace to myself.  It's hard for me to just accept such a public moment of fault as "okay." 

I took a risk. 

I didn't hesitate with the hymn introduction — I came right in, boldly and confidently.  This is one small consequence of that level of risk-taking.  Is it worth it?  Is it better to take the plunge and play your heart out at the wrong time or hesitate, play with half of yourself, and perhaps avoid such public errors?

I'd rather be known as someone who brings their whole heart into what they do; someone who takes those risks and is willing to make those public mistakes; someone who can be cracked. wide. open. and still, keep going. 

Grace is part of the process.

Christmas Choir Kick-Off: Highlights

It's the most wonderful time of the year!  We had our Christmas Choir Kick-Off this past Saturday and the weather turned cool just in time!  From red and green Christmas sweaters to the potluck lunch and paper snowflakes to gingerbread houses, a great time was had by all.  Here are a few pictures from the day:

My team's gingerbread house creation: notice the woodpile, warm glowing windows, picket fence, garlands, bushes, and fresh snowfall.

Where I Work

Welcome to my home-away-from-home!

Thought you might like a little tour of where I work, practice, plan, and teach! We had a crazy but wonderful night of rehearsals last night - first night back for the children in Singers & Scholars and we even had a couple of new faces! Tomorrow is our Christmas Choir Kick-Off for the Sanctuary Choir (and friends joining us for the cantata - yes, I discovered a stack of cantata scores in the choir library during my Christmas planning this summer!) With rehearsal time, a potluck lunch, Christmas decorations, fellowship, and even a gingerbread house decorating contest, it promises to be a stellar way to begin the season. Pictures to follow...

Christmas Planning

It's never too early to start planning for Christmas!  Such is the choir director's life, at least.  I love summer planning.  Recently, I've been perusing all the sampler catalogs that have come in the mail over the past month, listening to the demo CDs, searching Pepperfor inspiration, and writing down theme ideas.  In my search for old Christmas hymns and texts, I discovered this gorgeous poem:

"Light of the world, we hail Thee Flushing the eastern skies; Never shall darkness veil Thee Again from human eyes; Too long, alas, withholden, Now spread from shore to shore, Thy light so glad and golden, Shall set on earth no more.

Light of the world, before Thee Our spirits prostrate fall; We worship, we adore Thee, Thou Light, the life of all, With Thee is no forgetting Of all Thine hand hath made; Thy rising hath no setting, Thy sunshine hath no shade.

Light of the world, illumine This darkened land of Thine, Till everything that's human Be filled with what's divine; Till every tongue and nation, From sin's dominion free, Rise in the new creation Which springs from Love and Thee. Amen."

- Rev. J.S.B. Monsell, 1863 (from The Sunday School Book)

My current list of traditional hymns/carols:

  • Coventry Carol
  • Once in Royal David's City
  • Break Forth, O Beauteous Heavenly Light
  • O Sing a Song of Bethlehem
  • Sing We Now of Christmas

As for other pieces, I love:

  • Before the Marvel of This Night (Carl Schalk)
  • Of the Father's Love Begotten (Jay Rouse - listen to it here)
  • All My Heart This Night Rejoices (Leo Nestor - listen to it here)
  • The Yearning (Craig Courtney - listen to it here).

And if you think I'm crazy now, just wait until next month!  Christmas folder assembly, Christmas decorations for the kick-off, and Christmas cookie-baking!  Merry Christmas, y'all!

"It's been a real treat!"

It all started with the Kitchen Aid. That's right. I am the very proud owner of a Kitchen Aid mixer. Our very first wedding present! (Am I breaking a rule by using it before the wedding?) I saw a very creative packaging idea on Pinterest (here) and thought it would be just perfect for an end-of-the-year choir gift.

I began by picking out a recipe - "Chocolate Chip Supreme Cookies" from Southern Living.

Now, for the packaging. All you need is address labels (or any type, really), wax paper, and CD sleeves. I designed a label (portrait instead of landscape), wrapped each cookie in a rectangle piece of wax paper, and voila!

Choir Concert

This weekend, the Sanctuary Choir performed a concert of their favorite anthems from the 2010-2011 church year.  We chose a Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m., dressed in black and white, put together a program, and planned a reception of sweet treats.  How did we choose the music?  We took a vote!  Here are the choir's collective "top 10" anthems (in program order): 1. And the Father Will Dance (Mark Hayes) 2. Blest Are They (David Haas) 3. Come to the Water (arr. Lynda Hasseler) 4. For the Beauty of the Earth (John Rutter) 5. Lo, How A Rose E'er Blooming (Michael Praetorius) 6. An Hour of Hallowed Peace (Steve Danyew) 7. Brother James' Air (arr. Gordon Jacob) 8. Speaking Love (Steve Danyew) 9. Prayer for Peace (Mary Lynn Lightfoot) 10. Go Light Your World (Chris Rice)

We had a great turnout (about 80) and it was a wonderful experience for all involved!  And there were cupcakes!

We talk often about the text in our rehearsals and preparation of music.  It is our way of communicating the message of each anthem to those listening.  As such, we thought it important that those attending this concert have at least a few representative lines for each piece.  Here are the program notes we included in each program:

And the Father Will Dance is a jubilant anthem based on Zephaniah 3:17: “The LORD thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save, he will rejoice over thee with joy; he will rest in his love, he will joy over thee with singing.”

Blest Are They is a beautiful portrayal of the Beatitudes from Matthew 5:3-12.  The alternating verse/chorus structure of this piece brings back recurring text of hope and assurance.

Come to the Water is a powerful, moving anthem; one which reminds us of God’s beckoning call – “Come.”

For the Beauty of the Earth is the first in our set of anthems with old texts.  Written by Folliott Pierpont in 1864, the text of this traditional hymn of thanksgiving reads as follows:

For the beauty of the earth, for the beauty of the skies, For the love, which from our birth over and around us lies, Lord of all, to thee we raise this, our joyful hymn of praise.

Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming is the oldest anthem on our program today.  With the tune dating back to the Renaissance period (16th century – harmonized by Praetorius in 1609) and original German text from the 15th century (Anonymous), this hymn is traditionally sung during the season of Advent.

Lo, how a rose e’er blooming, from tender stem hath sprung! Of Jesse’s lineage coming, as men of old have sung. It came, a flow’ret bright, Amid the cold of winter, when half-spent was the night.

An Hour of Hallowed Peace is a new composition by Steve Danyew composed for the Sanctuary Choir in April 2011.  The text by William Tappan was discovered in an old hymnal purchased at last year’s Westminster Historical Society Sale:

There is an hour of hallowed peace For those with cares oppressed When sighs and sorrowing shall cease, And all be hushed to rest: ‘Tis then the soul is freed from fears And doubts, which here annoy; Then they, who oft have sown in tears, Shall reap again in joy.

Brother James’ Air was first published in 1915 by the Scottish composer, James Leith Macbeth Bain (known as Brother James).  Gordon Jacob set the text of Psalm 23 to the tune in 1934:

Speaking Love is a new composition by Steve Danyew composed for the Sanctuary Choir in December 2010.  Though written for the Christmas season, the message is one to live by all through the year:

Giving joy, sharing hope, Cheering spirits, sing noel, Being comfort strong enough, Peace on earth, speaking love.

Prayer for Peace is a beautiful, lyrical anthem – a reflection on our desire for peace in our hearts and across the nations.

Go Light Your World is an upbeat, contemporary piece – a call to reach out to the lonely, the lost, and those in need; to light a candle, to share the light of Christ.

The Adult Church Choir Rehearsal

The Sanctuary Choir has had an exciting year! First of all, look how we've grown from 12 members last summer to 21 members at Christmas time! We have a great group of enthusiastic singers who are very faithful to the music program and are eager to learn! What more could a director ask of a choir? Take a seat on one of the red velvet pews in the back of the Sanctuary and observe one of our Thursday night choir rehearsals...


Sanctuary Choir Rehearsal

7:00-7:10 p.m. - Warm-Ups

  • Stretches, sighs, sirens, humming, chewing, facial massage

  • Breathe in for four counts, hold for four counts, breathe out for four counts

  • Me-ahh (starting with a D Major triad going up: 15-4321)

  • Vi-va (starting with a D Major triad going up: 1234-5656-54321)

  • Vocal Siren

  • Reminders: singing through the consonant to the vowel, sitting on top of the note instead of reaching up to it

Opening Prayer

7:10-7:15 p.m. - Sunday’s Anthem

  • Prayer for Peace (Lightfoot)

  • Reminders: tall mouth-shape, tempo changes, dynamics, cut-offs, more breath preparation before entrances

7:15-7:20 p.m. - Service Music (all a cappella)

  • Introit: O Worship the King (Traditional Hymn)

  • Prayer Response: Breathe on Me, Breath of God (Traditional Hymn)

  • Benediction Response: Amen (Danyew)

  • Reminders: breathing together, imagining first note before singing it, singing into the sound around you, enunciate!

7:20-7:50 p.m. - Anthems

  • Come to the Water (Hasseler) - new

  • Reminders: direction of phrases (most important word of phrase), breath preparation, phrase-shaping

  • An Hour of Hallowed Peace (Danyew)

  • Reminders: "hushed" text painting (singing the word in a way that depicts its meaning), breath support for soft singing, preparing to sing 5ths, direction of phrases (most important word of phrase), phrase-shaping

  • Jesus, Savior, Friend (Glass)

  • Reminders: consistent tempo, syncopated rhythm review, tall mouth shape/vowels, confidence, relationship of vocal parts to accompaniment

7:50-7:55 p.m. - Announcements

  • Choir picture is up on the website!

  • Joke Time

7:55-8:00 p.m. - Talk Break

8:00-8:30 p.m. - Anthems

  • You Are the Song (Courtney)

  • Reminders: syncopated rhythm review, parts review, relationship of vocal parts to accompaniment

  • The Gift of Love (Traditional Hymn) - a cappella, rehearse in circle

  • Reminders: look up!, blend with people around you, direction of phrases, phrase-shaping, dynamic contour

Prayer Circle


What does your church choir rehearsal look like?

What Does a Music Director Do?

I’m two weeks into my new job and absolutely love it! 

I am the Director of Music at the congregational church in town – about a 3-minute walk from home.  The people have been incredibly supportive and welcoming and made us feel right at home from the very first week.  You may be wondering:

What does a music director do?

Here’s a sneak peek into my first week on the job.

Week 1: First Sunday

July 4th!  I wanted to program something a little patriotic without being too blatant so I settled on the vocal arrangement of “Simple Gifts” by Aaron Copland with Steve on the saxophone.  It was the perfect Americana prelude. 

The rest of the music for the service included three hymns (selected by the pastor), an anthem, the Lord’s Prayer, an offertory, two congregational responses, two pieces for communion, and a postlude.  All in all, a lot of music! 

I was a little surprised when I received the first draft of the bulletin but I was also reassured that music plays a significant role in the life of this church.  I did a little bit of searching for arrangements that I could substitute for the last verse of each hymn.  It was a bold move not knowing how the congregation would respond.  For the closing hymn, “O Beautiful,” I segued quickly from verse 3 into a 4-bar interlude and I heard the congregation inhale and then pause when they realized my plan.  They came in right on time for the last verse, singing proudly and many came up afterward to tell me how much they loved being caught off-guard! 

Note to self: need more hymn arrangements.

Also, a note on the Lord’s Prayer – when the previous director, Ann, wrote in the music, “Follow them here,” she really meant it.  In addition to altering the rhythm throughout, the whole last section transitioned into a duple meter in the score (the congregation stayed in triple).  That will keep you on your toes! 

Note to self: before next Communion Sunday, transpose this piece down a whole step.

Week 1: The Choir Room

I have a desk!  And a chair!  I was excited to set up an informal workspace (and have internet) and get started on my work in the choir room. 

The room is a good size – two rows of oak spindle-back chairs stretch out in a subtle arc in front of the Clavinova.  There are two windows, a closet for storage and at least three sets of choir robes (children to adults), a bookshelf with files and stacks of hymnals, and a bulletin board. 

There is a small hallway connecting the choir room to the Sanctuary where the choir folders are kept on a white built-in bookcase and where decades of music is filed. 

Where to begin? 

I started in the closet – I found stacks of old choir folders, empty choir robe boxes, handbell gloves, a drum, and the tablecloths for the altar.  Nothing too out of the ordinary.  I straightened the bookshelves and found stacks of reference copies collected by previous directors.  Publishers love sending packets of free music for your perusal hoping that you’ll like something they send enough to buy it.  The goal is to sort through everything that’s sent so that the things you don’t like or won’t buy get recycled… good thing I have a recycling bin! 

The next task was to begin exploring the filing cabinets.  I set up my laptop on a music stand and began the long process of inventory.  Everything seems to be alphabetized and in order but many of the anthems are outdated and most likely out of print. 

Should I keep them filed and pull everything else out?  Or should it all stay combined in one filing system?

This week has been more of the same – inventory, updating the church website, preparing for Sunday, and a few planning meetings for the fall.  Stay tuned for more updates!