protestant hymnody: shapenote traditions
Transcription
protestant hymnody: shapenote traditions
protestant hymnody: shapenote traditions The Case Against the ‘Old Way’ Rev’d Thomas Walter (1696-1725) of Boston, voices his opposition to ‘Old Way’ singing in 1721 in ‘The Grounds and Rules of Musick Explained’ (Walter 1721). ‘Our tunes are now miserably tortured, and twisted, and quavered, in some churches, in an horrid Medley of confused and disorderly Noises . . . Our tunes are, for Want of a Standard to appeal to in all our Singing, left to the Mercy of every unskillful Throat to chop and alter, twist and change, according to their infinitely diverse and no less odd Humours and Fancies’ ‘Regular Singing’ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ Singing by ‘regular’ pulse/tempo Singing by note: using notation Singing in multiple parts Utilizing same sacred poetry as line singing America’s Emerging Music Biz ❖ 1638 first printing press arrives in colonial America ❖ 1770 William Billings publishes the New England Psalm Singer, ➢ First collection of Americanborn composers ➢ Including many by Billings ❖ 18th century, New England Puritans develop singing schools attached to church Daniel Read William Billings Plain song: ‘Africa’ by William Billings first published 1770 Now shall my inward joys arise and burst into a song; Almighty love inspires my heart, and pleasure tunes my tongue -- Isaac Watts, 1709 Fuging Tune: ‘Calvary’ by Daniel Read first published 1785 My thoughts that often mount the skies, go, search the world beneath, where nature all in ruin lies, and owns her sov’reign Death! --Isaac Watts, 1707 Tenor: Where nature all in ruin lies Bass+Alto: Where nature all in ruin lies Treble (soprano): Where nature all in ruin lies Tunebooks ❖ Designed for sacred/secular use ❖ Earliest ones collected European compositions ❖ Popularity of New England School eclipsed that of Europeans ❖ Compilers heavily plagiarized each other Shape Notation ❖ Invented in 1801 by William Smith and William Little of Philadelphia for their Easy Instructor tunebook ❖ Shaped note-heads paired with pitches of major/minor scale ❖ Notation becomes popular in tunebooks along mid-Atlantic and southern states The Sacred Harp, ❖ Published 1844 by Benjamin Franklin White of Georgia ❖ Still sung by families & communities in unbroken tradition in GA, AL ❖ Collected New England School tunes with arrangements of folk hymns Folk Hymnody ❖ Melodies and texts from folk sources arranged for part singing according to stylistic conventions of 19th century hymnody ❖ Often in minor keys ❖ Increasing use of dyadic harmony ❖ “Wondrous Love” as found in The Sacred Harp Singing Conventions ❖ Singings, or Singing Conventions: Annual, multi-day gatherings drawing from regional/national community. ❖ Chattahoochee Musical Convention, in Georgia, oldest continuing convention ➢ founded in 1852 to sing Sacred Harp Singing Practices ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ Sit in hollow square Leaders Beat time Singing the notes Always sung LOUD New Topia, by Ruebin Monday, 1816 The ‘Better Music Movement’ Reformed style in the 19th Century American Innovations & Preferences ❖ Shape notation ❖ Singing schools ❖ Folk Hymnody ❖ Minor keys ❖ Dyadic Harmony European Convention ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ‘Round note’ notation Conservatories ‘Scientific’ composition Major keys Triadic Harmony Lowell Mason leads ‘Better Music’ movement of 19th century Villulia, 1850 ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ folk melody dyadic harmony minor key ‘hollow’, ‘rough’, ‘brutal’ sound Nearer My God To Thee, 1859 ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ composed melody triadic harmony major key ‘full’, ‘smooth’, ‘gentle’ sound Older Shape Note Singings ❖ Benton, KY Southern Harmony (1835) ❖ Alabama and Georgia,The Sacred Harp (1844) ❖ East Tennessee, New Harp of Columbia (1848) ❖ North Carolina, The Christian Harmony (1866) The Colored Sacred Harp ❖ Compiled by Judge Jackson of Ozark, AL in 1934 ❖ Sung amongst small population of surrounding Wiregrass region along with Sacred Harp ❖ Limited/no use outside of Wiregrass The Sacred Harp’s Survival ❖ Family bonds ➢ Preserved amongst groups of families sharing multigenerational history in Alabama, Georgia ❖ Communal remembrance ➢ Rituals of remembrance like memorial lesson performed at singings. ❖ Participatory nature ➢ Musical meaning rooted in participation rather than listening Several generations of the Wootten family of Alabama sing the Sacred Harp tune ‘Present Joys’.... What kind of composition is it? Fayette County, Alabama Taken at Aldridge Memorial Singing The Sacred Harp’s Survival ❖ Family bonds ➢ Preserved amongst groups of families sharing multigenerational history in Alabama, Georgia ❖ Communal remembrance ➢ Rituals of remembrance like memorial lesson performed at singings. ❖ Participatory nature ➢ Musical meaning rooted in participation rather than listening David Lee of Hoboken, Georgia speaks about the Sacred Harp’s survival and revival Several generations of the Wootten family of Alabama sing the Sacred Harp tune ‘Present Joys’.... What kind of composition is it? The Sacred Harp’s Survival ❖ Sacred Harp Publishing Company, of Carrollton, GA periodically revises tunebook ➢ latest in 1991 ❖ Revisions always include tunes by living composers ❖ Small evolutions in style present, but generally limited to parameters of 19th century Revival ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ 1960s-70s ‘folk boom’ bring new attention to old American 80s-Present New singers nationwide south to learn and participate 2000-Present Sacred Harp music included in several major movies set in historic south New conventions founded across country Older, regional community expands to modern national scale The Modern Community ❖ Conventions supported through reciprocal travel ❖ ‘Revival’ singers and ‘Traditional’ singers ❖ Culture of respect for tradition as presented by southerners ❖ Cultural / ideological split between traditional and revival singers ➢ Traditional singers often describe their music in terms of worship ➢ Revival singers often describe this music to be folk music
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