This is Peter Kearney’s very popular song all around the world, which I found out when I looked at in the Praise to God Parish Hymn Book.
This is another of the folk style songs that John de Luca rearranged for his hymnal and for this one he made radical improvements over the version in PTG.
Peter Kearney sells his version of the sheet music of his song at his website.
John de Luca changed it from 3/4 to 12/8 and eliminated many extraneous bars to make it flow. To be fair most versions I have heard have done the same. He also added an introduction and increased the variety of chords from three to eight.
Fill my house unto the fullest, Eat my bread and drink my wine, The love I bear is held from no-one: All I own and all I do I give to you.
Take my time unto the fullest, Find in me the trust you seek, Take my hands to you outreaching: All I own and all I do I give to you.
Christ our Lord with love enormous, From the Cross his lesson taught; Love all men as I have loved you: All I own and all I do I give to you.
Join with me as one in Christ-love, May our hearts all beat as one; May we give ourselves completely: All I own and all I do I give to you.
This is another of John de Luca’s arrangements of folk style hymns. Firstly, he dropped the key from G to F, which I like from a singing perspective, but is a typical keyboard player’s revenge on guitarists.
Amazingly from a chord perspective things are even simpler:
Looking at the keyboard arrangement, all I can say is that Erica Marshall’s arrangement for Father Frank is a lot different from this one. Any organists who have NLPHB night be able to tell us more.
I use this song every year, but as a hymn about the Trinity it doesn’t actually say a lot.
The last time I looked at this my backing was uncharacteristically restrained. This time I made a folk styled backing:
1 Father, in my life I see You are God who walks with me! You hold my life in Your hands: Close beside You I will stand! I give all my life to you: Help me, Father, to be true!
2 Jesus, in my life I see You are God who walks with me! You hold my life in Your hands: Close beside You I will stand! I give all my life to you: Help me, Jesus, to be true
3 Spirit, in my life I see You are God who walks with me! You hold my life in Your hands: Close beside You I will stand! I give all my life to you: Help me, Spirit, to be true
This is the venerable hymn text by Frederick William Faber here set to SAWSTON. When I blogged it for CWB I, I thought it was an idiosyncratic choice, but here we have John de Luca making the same choice, so it was a local preference I suppose.
I don’t like the text any more than I did, even in this version, which differs somewhat from others I have seen.
I made a new organ backing on BIAB:
1 Faith of our fathers, living still In spite of dungeon, fire and sword: Oh, how our hearts beat high with joy Whene’er we hear that glorious word! Faith of our fathers! holy faith! We will be true to thee till death! (Rpt)
2 Our fathers, chained in prisons dark, Were still in heart and conscience free: How sweet would be their children’s fate, If they, like them, could die for thee! Faith of our fathers! holy faith! We will be true to thee till death! (Rpt)
3 Faith of our fathers, Mary’s prayers Shall win all people back to thee; And through the truth that comes from God Mankind shall then indeed be free! Faith of our fathers! holy faith! We will be true to thee till death! (Rpt)
4 Faith of our fathers, we will love Both friend and foe in all our strife, And preach thee too, as love knows how By kindly words and virtuous life: Faith of our fathers! holy faith! We will be true to thee till death! (Rpt)
This Eucharistic hymn survived to CWB II as “Draw Near and Take” with the same setting of GUSTATE. It is John Mason Neale’s translation of the C7 hymn from the Antiphonary of Bennchar. That said there has been a lot of alt about and the words below are from this hymnal and vary greatly from CWB II.
CWB II preferred de Luca’s choice of tune to the setting found in CWB I. He used Anthony Gregory Murray’s setting of this traditional Irish song.
Since my other backing isn’t organ, this one is:
Draw nigh and take the body of our Lord, And drink the holy blood for you outpoured; Saved by his Body, hallowed by that Blood, Whereby refreshed, we render thanks to God.
Salvation’s giver, Christ the only Son, By that his Cross and Blood the victory won; Offered was he for greatest and for least, Himself the victim and Himself the priest.
Victims were offered by the Law of old That, in a type, celestial mysteries told; He ransomer from death and light and shade, Giveth his holy grace, his saints to aid.
Approach ye then with faithful hearts sincere, And take the safeguard of salvation here. He that in this world rules his saints and shields, To all believers life eternal yields.
With heavenly bread makes them that hunger whole, Gives living waters to the thirsting soul, Alpha and Omega, to whom shall bow All nations at the doom, is with us now.
This is great – you get to see the organ being pumped.
There is a musical phrase in this tune that seems to have influenced the the great Stan Rogers’s song Northwest Passage.
This is a typical Christopher Willcock setting, this time of Psalm 26 (27). The refrain is singable, if too high, but the cantor doing the verses has odd notes and time changes to contend with.
I’ve never covered this Christmas carol before, I suppose we have plenty of others. In the form presented here the words are kind of gnarly to sing.
It is a C16 French Carol with a surprisingly recent text by George Radcliffe Woodward (1848-1934). Interestly, Hymnary notes that his rather rigid translation style “did not always produce singable hymns.”
NLPHB provided chords for this one, which made a backing easier. While the sheet music is John de Luca’s arrangement, I just let BIAB loose with the chords. I did not repeat the chorus each time in my backing, although I know it is customary to do so.
1 Ding dong, merrily on high! In heav’n the bells are ringing; ding dong, verily the sky is riv’n with angel singing. Gloria, hosannah in excelsis! Gloria, hosannah in excelsis!
2 E’en so here below, below, let steeple bells be swungen, And io, io, io, by priest and people sungen. Gloria, hosannah in excelsis! Gloria, hosannah in excelsis!
3 Pray ye dutifully prime your matin chime, ye ringers; may ye beautifully rhyme your evetime song, ye singers. Gloria, hosannah in excelsis! Gloria, hosannah in excelsis!
It has been usefully partially modernised, eg:
1 Ding, dong, merrily on high, In heaven the bells are ringing. Ding, dong, verily the sky Is filled with angels singing: etc.
2 And so here below, below Sing out in jubilation. Give a merry, merry toast To all of God’s creation. etc.
3 Hey, now dutifully chime To hail the King, ye ringers. May you beautifully rhyme Your evetime song, ye singers.
The Wiggles fixed the song by omitting most of the lyrics, although they left the sungen/swungen rhyme:
This is another Gelineau psalm, this time Psalm 42 (43) by Joseph Gelineau.
Verse six isn’t part of a psalm at all really.
I note The Australian Hymn Book gives two alternative antiphons, written by Anthony Gregory Murray, who we have come across before as 3/4 of the Wiggles.
GIA still sells the unrevised Gelineau Grail Psalms — well the verses at least are the original. (I’m told that including an M dash is a tell that this was written by AI.)
I was going to skip thesepsalms, but I’ve had a go at a backing. I’m pretty sure the tempo between the verses and the refrain is a little off but it’s an attempt.
Antiphon
I will go to the altar of God: praise the God of my joy.
1 Defend me, O God, and plead my cause against a godless nation. From deceitful and cunning men rescue me, O God.
2 Since you, O God, are my stronghold, why have you rejected me? Why do I go mourning oppressed by the foe?
3 O send forth your light and your truth; let these be my guide. Let them bring me to your holy mountain, to the place where you dwell.
4 And I will come to the altar of God, the God of my joy. My redeemer, I will thank you on the harp, O God, my God!
5 Why are you cast down my soul, why groan within me? Hope in God, I will praise him still, my Saviour and my God.
6 Praise the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit, both now and forever, The God who is, who was, and who will be, world without end.
I've worked my way through the As One Voice books and other collections making backings on Band in a Box to help me (& you if you're interested) learn new songs for church. This is aimed at churches and musicians that own the collections but haven't exploited them fully. If you don't have them they are certainly worth buying. This site is educational, nonprofit and designed to enhance the commercial prospects of songwriters. This site does not distribute copyrighted sheet music.
Disclaimer
Any opinions expressed here are personal views and not the responsibility of any Church.
All music backings posted are created by myself and the intention is for them to be used to learn the songs. If any copyright holder wishes me to cease publicising and promoting their wares and directing people to where sheet music can be legally purchased please let me know.
Mason’s “Mass of Glory and Praise”
To access my backings for Paul Mason's mass go to Feb 2011 in the archive.