Whit Sunday music spot: Rejoice in the Lord alway
In the Pentecost service broadcast from St James' church Whitehaven this morning (see previous post) the Revd Robert Jackson quoted a line from scripture,
"Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice."
The delightful anthem below is a 16th century setting of those words to music.
I once read a humorous book about Anglican church music, which included a glossary which defined the word "Anon" as
"A composer with many pseudonyms including Farrant, Tye and Redford."
I strongly suspect that the composer of this anthem, usually now given as "Anonymous" but previously often attributed to John Redford, was one of those in the writer's mind when that passage was drafted.
"Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice."
The delightful anthem below is a 16th century setting of those words to music.
I once read a humorous book about Anglican church music, which included a glossary which defined the word "Anon" as
"A composer with many pseudonyms including Farrant, Tye and Redford."
I strongly suspect that the composer of this anthem, usually now given as "Anonymous" but previously often attributed to John Redford, was one of those in the writer's mind when that passage was drafted.
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