little2add Posted June 20, 2024 Posted June 20, 2024 Instructor of the faithful, help me to understand Christ’s words.
Luigi Posted June 20, 2024 Author Posted June 20, 2024 "My God, My Freedom (and This Land That I Call Home)" by a young Fontella Bass. She re-recorded it on her last album, too. And her mother Martha Bass recorded it a long time ago. I think Mahalia Jackson recorded it before that, and I can't track down who wrote it. Whatever the recording history is, this one's to celebrate Juneteenth.
little2add Posted June 20, 2024 Posted June 20, 2024 O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer You my prayers, works, joys and sufferings of this day for all the intentions of Your Sacred Heart, in union with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass throughout the world, in reparation for my sins, for the intentions of all my relatives and friends, and in particular for the intentions of the Holy Father. Amen.
Luigi Posted June 21, 2024 Author Posted June 21, 2024 (edited) Joan Baez recorded a calypso version of The Lord's Prayer maybe 55 or 60 years ago. And since that's today's Gospel, I thought it appropriate to post the song today. I know some folks aren't crazy about Joan Baez, and that's fine, but all the other versions on YouTube are just plain cheesy - university choruses with piano accompaniment, for instance. Edited June 21, 2024 by Luigi
Luigi Posted June 22, 2024 Author Posted June 22, 2024 (edited) The Nunc Dimittis is a prayer, also known as the Song of Simeon or the Canticle of Simeon, found in Luke:2, 29-32. It is included in Vespers or Compline, whichever is the last liturgical prayer of the day in a given monastery. And since I post these songs at the end of the day, the Nunc Dimittis seems appropriate to the time. This setting was composed by the English composer Gustav Holst (1874-1934). It's eight-part harmony - two parts each for SATB. That, and the lack of a definite pulse or rhythm, give it a floaty, celestial feel. The lyrics are Simeon's words in Latin, followed by a Glory Be in Latin. I include the Latin lyrics and their English translation here because they're nearly impossible to decipher from the singers, even though the singers are very good. That's the problem with this kind of music compared to traditional Gospel songs - you have to already know the words to catch them in a performance... or you have to read along in the program. And you have to know Latin, too. And the English translation of the Latin. But it is beautiful music. Latin (Vulgate): Nunc dimittis servum tuum, Domine, secundum verbum tuum in pace: Quia viderunt oculi mei salutare tuum Quod parasti ante faciem omnium populorum: Lumen ad revelationem gentium, et gloriam plebis tuae Israel. Gloria Patri, et Filio, et Spiritui Sancto, sicut erat in principio, et nunc, et semper, et in saecula saeculorum. Amen. English (Translation of the Vulgate): Now thou dost dismiss thy servant, O Lord, according to thy word in peace; Because my eyes have seen thy salvation, Which thou hast prepared before the face of all peoples: A light to the revelation of the Gentiles, and the glory of thy people Israel. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. Edited June 22, 2024 by Luigi
Luigi Posted June 23, 2024 Author Posted June 23, 2024 Sallie Martin (1895-1988) was a friend of Dr. Thomas A. Dorsey, the Father of Gospel Music. She was never as famous as he was, or his student Mahalia Jackson, but she did collaborate with him in establishing a Gospel music convention, selling his music, and so forth. Here she sings "Little Wooden Church on the Hill." It features a recurring them in Gospel music, remembering the simple but honest church experiences of one youth - something we don't hear in Catholic music. Sister Shirley Caesar sings about it, and "Come to the Church in the Wildwood" is another example. Anyway, this is pretty rare because she didn't perform as much as others in her crowd. She starts with a short little preach and then segues seamlessly into the song. Also, there's a sound in here I can't identify - it could be a soprano singing "oooh," but I think it's actually a musical saw!
Luigi Posted June 24, 2024 Author Posted June 24, 2024 I know I've posted a number of songs by Sister Shirley Caesar, but I'm posting another. "Peace in the Midst of the Storm." I thought this was a pretty well-known standard song, and I looked for recordings by other people, but I found only one or two others, and they weren't nearly this good. I found other songs on the same theme, but I like this one much better.
Luigi Posted June 25, 2024 Author Posted June 25, 2024 "Wondrous Love" (also known as "What Wondrous Love Is This) is a very traditional hymn. The lyrics are from around 1811; the melody is a couple of hundred years older than that. It started showing up in the shape note hymnals in the 1820s and following. It's in the Dorian mode, which is a different scale than the typical one we use these days. This rendition is by Blue Highway, a group that is usually classified as bluegrass but which is really more like a roots group. They start with a mandolin intro and then go into a cappella singing, ending with a sort of an a cappella round.
Luigi Posted June 26, 2024 Author Posted June 26, 2024 I've already posted one song by Dorothy Norwood, but here's another, "Victory Is Mine." The words are very simple, the melody is very simple, but that means that everyone can sing along, and you can add your own verses as the spirit moves you. It starts with the chorus three or four times, then goes into verses (which follow the same melody as the chorus). But it's a very joyful song, You'll find yourself humming it. And it fits with today's first reading.
Luigi Posted June 27, 2024 Author Posted June 27, 2024 Rosanne Cash signs "50,000 Watts of Common Prayer." The Book of Common Prayer is the standard missal of the Anglican/Episcopal church. Cash considers music a form of "common prayer" - we can be united by singing our hopes, dreams, problems, etc. The 50,000 Watts refers to WDIA in Memphis; it was the first radio station in the South that was intended for Black audiences, and their motto was '50,000 watts of good will.' The lines "son of rhythm, brother of the blues" refers to the kind of secular music they played.
Luigi Posted June 28, 2024 Author Posted June 28, 2024 In today's first reading, King Jehoiachin, his mother, his court, his soldiers, and his skilled craftsmen are carried into captivity by King Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonians. Here's Boney M from 1979 - in some really creative outfits! - singing "By the Rivers of Babylon."
Luigi Posted June 29, 2024 Author Posted June 29, 2024 I don't post much in the way of Contemporary Christian music, but I like this one, "Clean" by Natalie Grant. And it fits with today's Gospel reading. Simple accompaniment - piano, and eventually cello - that sort of crescendos slowly throughout.
Luigi Posted June 30, 2024 Author Posted June 30, 2024 (edited) Eric Clapton was apparently raised Catholic. His life has not been an exemplar of Catholic life, but he is apparently still a man of faith. He wrote "Holy Mother" is the depths of his addiction. It could refer to The Virgin Mary, or it could refer to Holy Mother the Church. Whether or not this is a great song, it is impressive to see someone of his stature singing so unabashedly about his faith at a rock concert. Edited June 30, 2024 by Luigi
Luigi Posted July 1, 2024 Author Posted July 1, 2024 Picking up on the story within the story in today's Gospel, here's Sam Cooke with one of his greatest Gospel recordings with the Soul Stirrers - (If I Could Just) Touch the Hem of His Garment, released in 1956.
Luigi Posted July 2, 2024 Author Posted July 2, 2024 Paul Williams was a successful bluegrass musician starting in the Fifties, and he's still with us today. He wanted to marry a particular woman, but she told him he couldn't be a bluegrass musician and still serve the Lord. So he gave up secular bluegrass and switched completely to Gospel bluegrass. He plays the mandolin and sings, in what's known as "the high lonesome" style. The subdued instrumentation allows the voices and the lyrics to take center stage. Here's "God Saves Old Sinners."
Luigi Posted July 3, 2024 Author Posted July 3, 2024 (edited) Here's Stevie Wonder with his 1970 Top Ten hit "Heaven Help Us All" written by Ron Miller. It's as relevant today as it was then. Edited July 3, 2024 by Luigi
Luigi Posted July 4, 2024 Author Posted July 4, 2024 "(Don't Doubt Me Thomas) I Am That Man" apparently started out as a bluegrass Gospel song. Jimmy Swaggart Ministries (in this video) sort of expanded on it and arranged it for mass choir. It tells the highlights of the passion and resurrection, with each chorus referring back to Thomas, whose feast day is today. This is the only song I've posted that has Gospel harmonica for the instrumental break!
Luigi Posted July 5, 2024 Author Posted July 5, 2024 For Independence Day, Ray Charles sings "America the Beautiful" - not quite Gospel, but Christian references throughout.
Luigi Posted July 6, 2024 Author Posted July 6, 2024 Gillian Welch comes from a musical family. Her parents wrote music for The Carol Burnett Show. Welch was raised in Hollywood, and she used to play bass for a punk band and a psychedelic band. Then she discovered bluegrass and other forms of Americana music. I don't think she's a Christian - at least she's never come out and said so. But she's written some Gospel songs, and she has a real knack for capturing the spirit and the sound of that Americana style. This is "By the Mark." Other people have recorded it and made it a hit on the bluegrass charts, but this is the original, Welch singing with her musical partner Dave Rawlings, who also co-wrote the song.
Luigi Posted July 7, 2024 Author Posted July 7, 2024 Sounds Like Reign is an interesting group, although I can find little information about them. It started out as a married couple, but they've added their two sons on this song. Brackin KIrkland is a sound engineer and plays a number of instruments; his wife, Lindsay, plays guitar and sings. So they're a Mom & Pop music shop. I know they're Christians but I don't know what denomination. They sing a lot of traditional hymns but also newly composed ones like this one "Oh Christ Surround Me" (written by Richard Bruxvoort Colligan), which seems to be a variation on St. Patrick's Breastplate.
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