What did you sing at church today?

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  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    Alan29 wrote: »
    I had to look that one up ... I don't think it would fit into many churches' hymnody today!

    It's still pretty common in RC places and always appears in RC hymn books. "Firmly I believe and truly God is three and God is one... "

    It's in Complete Anglican Hymns Old And New (the Orange Book), complete with the verse about holding the Church's teachings as God's own...

    We've had it at Our Place from time to time, usually to the tune Shipston, but not today. Today is a Feast of St Hallmark, after all.

    Does anyone remember singing the tune from 'the pink book' at school in the 1970s? I've never come across it since. We tried a lot of tunes from that book, including a breakneck speed version of 'Through all the changing scenes of life'. But really the only one which seems to have stuck is 'O Jesus I have promised'.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    We sang the Athanasian Creed to Anglican Chant a few times when we were in Canada.

    If a heretical Dean had tried "missing out" the anthem there would have been ructions. 😈
  • Baptist TrainfanBaptist Trainfan Shipmate
    edited 5:54AM
    Gill H wrote: »
    This
    Does anyone remember singing the tune from 'the pink book' at school in the 1970s? I've never come across it since. We tried a lot of tunes from that book, including a breakneck speed version of 'Through all the changing scenes of life'. But really the only one which seems to have stuck is 'O Jesus I have promised'.

    This, perhaps? https://tinyurl.com/4hehb424

    We always use that tune for "O Jesus I have promised" in this church! Had it just a couple of weeks ago.
  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    It's called 30 20th century hymn tunes. Contains both gems and horrors. There's a setting of a Donne sonnet at the end which I love but have never heard anyone else sing.

  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    That’s the one!

    Actually ‘At the name of Jesus’ (complete with twiddly bit between the verses) seems to have stuck around too.
  • An organist of my acquaintance refused (I know not why) to play the twiddly bits, which made the hymn into a rather stop-start experience.
  • How very odd. The twiddly bits are surely there to help swing the hymn along, as you imply.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    I once had a musician who struggled with the left hand on the keyboard and stuck with chords. Faced with the counter melody in the bass line of DESERT (LYNGHAM) for O for a thousand tongues he just... skipped that bar entirely! Having been pulled up short mid-verse I approached him the next time it was chosen and coaxed him into giving that bar a try with the left hand, and all was well.
  • At Greenbelt’s Beer and Hymns we loudly sing the twiddly bits in At the name of Jesus ‘dada dada dada dadaaa’.
  • At Greenbelt’s Beer and Hymns we loudly sing the twiddly bits in At the name of Jesus ‘dada dada dada dadaaa’.

    Ah, a bit of rallentando before jumping into the next verse ...
  • How very odd. The twiddly bits are surely there to help swing the hymn along, as you imply.

    Yes - and they're in the music! (Said organist was also not keen on the upper part of the Townend "The Lord's my shepherd", but reluctantly agreed to it).
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    I always imagine At the Name of Jesus being played on a fairground organ. Especially the link.
  • And, at the end, the roundabout slows down and everyone gets off. Yes, that works!

    FYI: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnSB-ycjIu4
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    As my late Beloved would have said, the only acceptable tune for At the name of Jesus is King's Weston. :naughty:
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    The late +Mervyn Stockwood liked to sing At the Name of Jesus to Pomp & Circumstance (aka Land of Hope & Glory)
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