Mark Rothko, Untitled, 1970 (his final work)
It was a great pleasure to introduce Choral Classics at St Stephen Walbrook on Thursday 23rd June 2022. My script is below. You can watch the recording below (the video will not appear in ‘mobile view’ – please click “view web version” at the bottom of the home page if reading on a tablet or phone) or watch on YouTube at this link.
CHOIR : Parry, Never Weather Beaten Sail from 'Songs of
Farewell' (3.5m)
Hello and welcome to Choral Classics, sung for the last time by this talented twelve
– great Apostles of Choral Music – our Choral Scholars under the direction of
Olivia Tait and accompanied by Phoebe Tak Man Chow.
The theme we’ve chosen for our music and readings this week is ‘Farewell’ and over
the next twenty minutes we’ll explore the painful and positive nature of saying
farewell, goodbye.
We’ve just heard Never Weather Beaten Sail; a lyrical setting of a poem by
Thomas Campion which forms the third of six Songs of Farewell by Charles Hubert
Hastings Parry, composed towards the end of his life and during the First World
War, in which many of his students were killed or injured.
The composition is understood as Parry’s valedictory wave – a musical farewell not
only to his own earthly life but also to the structures of the society - and
the Europe - that he knew. As war wages once again on the continent, this
musical plea for God’s calming presence upon the chaotic waters of our world
seems as necessary now as then.
Our next piece is by
the ‘Barnsley Nightingale’ - contemporary singer-songwriter Kate Busby,
arranged for choir by Jim Clements. Underneath the Stars describes a farewell
between two lovers, meeting for the last time beneath a beautiful starlit sky. As
in Parry’s Song, we encounter the bittersweet nature of farewell at multiple
scales. The repeated penultimate refrain that we act under our ‘own free will’ evokes
the memory of the expulsion from Eden. The final, enduring words are those of
loving kindness; ‘Go gently’.
CHOIR : Rusby, Underneath the Stars (3.5m)
The ultimate farewell punctuating all life on earth – death – is the theme for
the majority of the published work of the Protestant Irish poet Evangeline
Paterson, who died in the year two thousand.
Her style is not to
shield us from reality of this final goodbye – but to face up to it.
“As Christians, I think [death] is something we have constantly in our minds”
she explained. “But not in any morbid sense. I see death as a tremendously
exciting passage into something unbelievably better than we have here.” “Life
wouldn’t be complete without it.”
(Source : https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/jicsc/04-032.pdf)
Reading : Deathbed by
Evangeline Paterson
Now, when the frail and fine-spun
Web of mortality
Gapes, and lets slip
What we have loved so
long
From out our lighted
present
Into the trackless dark
We turn, blinded,
Not to the Christ in
Glory,
Stars about his feet,
But to the Son of Man,
Back from the tomb,
Who built fires, ate
fish,
Spoke with friends, and
walked
A dusty road at evening.
Here, in this room, in
This stark and timeless
moment,
We hear those footsteps
And
With suddenly lifted
hearts
Acknowledge
The irrelevance of
death.
The revelation that
Christ has conquered death – made it irrelevant – is the inspiration for our
next piece of music. The beautiful ‘Abendlied’ or Evening song was written by
Josef Rheinberger in 1855 when he was just fifteen years old. The text is taken
from the description of the appearance of the resurrected Christ to the
disciples on ‘a dusty road (to Emmaus) at evening’.
‘Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.’ They
ask. So he went in to stay with them.
CHOIR : Rheinberger, Abendleid (3.5m)
The poet Edward Thomas had a passionate but platonic relationship with the author and hymn writer Eleanor Farjeon, which has been immortalised on stage.
Offering an alternative perspective to Kate Rusby’s ‘Go gently’, Thomas’s poem
‘Go Now’ describes a man and a woman parting ways and the lasting effect that
her words had on him. As in Rusby’s song, the poet cannot separate his love for
another with the beauty of the natural world. Like Paterson’s poem, Thomas is a
realist. Concluding that in human relationships, unlike our relationship with
God, we must accept that sometimes a farewell is forever. The text contains a
much needed reminder to us all – never to forget to cherish and value our close
relationships.
Reading : ‘Go Now’ by Edward Thomas
Like the touch of rain
she was
On a man’s flesh and
hair and eyes
When the joy of walking
thus
Has taken him by
surprise:
With the love of the
storm he burns,
He sings, he laughs,
well I know how,
But forgets when he
returns
As I shall not forget
her ‘Go now’.
Those two words shut a
door
Between me and the
blessed rain
That was never shut
before
And will not open
again.
Thank you for joining
us today and a special thank you to our Choral Scholars for their beautiful
music over the past year. We rely on generous donations from people like you,
who love our ministry of music here at Wonderful Walbrook. There are ways and
means of making a contribution before you leave the church to help us sustain
it and we are most grateful to you for your support.
Do stay with us for our
Choral Eucharist which begins at 12.45pm, which is just a click away if you’re
watching online.
So time it’s for us to bid
a fond farewell to Choral Classics for this term and to this year’s Choral
Scholars.
I’ll leave this
talented twelve to say goodbye to you in their own special way. Performing a
golden oldie, composed by James “Pookie” Hudson in 1952 – a lament on having to
leave his girlfriend, Bonnie Jean each night after her mother kicked him out
onto the street. This choral version has been arranged by Kirby Shaw.
CHOIR : Carter and Hudson, Goodnight Sweetheart arr. Shaw
(2m)
Image : Untitled Mark Rothko, 1970 - his final work, which was found just feet away from where the artist committed suicide in 1970.
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