Anthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 52 in my successful attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you have enjoyed listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . Well, here we are at Anthem 52. It's been a great year of composition, despite the many traditional and unexpected ups and downs of family life. At times it's been a bit of a slog but I'm surprised how little difficulty I've had coming up with ideas and working them through. Whether that has...
info_outline Anthem 51 - Childing of a maiden brightAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 51 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . This week, I was still on the search for more unusual Christmas carol words. After quite a bit of unsuccessful browsing, I found an order of service for King's College Chapel way back in 1918. It's fascinating to see what has changed and what hasn't since then. One of the most interesting sets of words was for a...
info_outline Anthem 50 - A babe is bornAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 50 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . Wow. I've made it all the way to 50 anthems. I've surprised myself - and probably you as well, I imagine. I'm also pleased to say that the 50th anthem is one of my favourites so far. The words come from yet another Carol Service order of service, this time from Pembroke College, Oxford. The 15th Century words...
info_outline Anthem 49 - Today our GodAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 49 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . By contrast to last week, this anthem was much easier to compose. In order to catch up with the rapidly disappearing weeks of 2024, I set myself the target of writing this anthem in 2 days. I wondered if I could write a carol that would fit into one of the 'standard' patterns congregations would recognise - and...
info_outline Anthem 48 - Rorate coeli desuper!Anthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 48 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . It was lovely to sing in Holy Trinity Church's Advent Carol Service last Sunday - my first service back with the choir. Charlotte was also able to come along and the singing was good. It's been a difficult week for composition. Everything seems to have gone very slowly and I basically a week behind where I...
info_outline Anthem 47 - There is a flow'rAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 47 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . I went back to Advent this week - or at least I looked for some more Advent lyrics. It occurred to me that I could find some lyrics in service booklets for Advent Carol Services so I tried to search for those. The second one I found was from The Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Mary the Virgin of...
info_outline Anthem 46 - O come, Divine MessiahAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 46 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . This week, in comparison to last week, was more straightforward, in terms of composing anyway. I realised that I hadn't written very many Advent carols (have I written any as part of Anthem 52?) and, considering the Advent Carol Service is my favourite of the Church year, I should remedy that situation. So I...
info_outline Anthem 45 - Behold, the grace appearsAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 45 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . It was a slightly odd week for composition. I found it difficult to get going but when I did it seemed to go fairly well. Guess where I found the words? Yes, you're correct - Isaac Watts. This time it's a very positive set of lyrics so I decided on a loud anthem, with emphatic organ accompaniment. Here are...
info_outline Anthem 44 - Hush, my dearAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 44 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . It was time for an unaccompanied anthem this week - in fact another Christmas Carol. You won't be surprised to hear that the words come from Isaac Watts yet again. It's a lullaby sung by a mother, recalling the infant Jesus and Mary. From my experience of singing many carols, I think it's a little unusual....
info_outline Anthem 43 - Behold, the grace appearsAnthem 52
Welcome to Anthem 43 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - or Instagram - and send me a message to . Despite fitting in little bits of composition time around everything else that is currently occupying us, this anthem seemed to flow fairly well. I've resisted the temptation to start writing Christmas Carols until now. Writing carols is how I discovered that I could compose for choirs quickly, much to my...
info_outlineWelcome to Anthem 29 in my attempt to write a new choir anthem every week for a year. I’m Kevin Mulryne and I hope you will enjoy listening to my progress throughout 2024. Please do visit the website Anthem52.com, follow along on x.com - @realanthem52 or Instagram - @realanthem52 and send me a message to [email protected].
This was the last week of the academic year and my choir sang a final choral evensong at the ancient Guild Chapel in Stratford. It was founded by the mediaeval Guild of the Holy Cross and is just across the road from the site of William Shakespeare's final house in the town. William's father is reputed to have been behind the whitewashing of the elaborate mediaeval wall paintings in the Chapel that have been restored recently.
When I attended King Edward VI School, and then my son Edward did the same, school services were held in the Guild Chapel. The school was founded by the Guild to provide education for their sons and William Shakespeare is a former pupil.
It has been a lovely tradition for a number of years for the final Evensong of the year to be at the Guild Chapel which has a much better acoustic than Holy Trinity Church. There is also a recently-renovated organ there which is very loud! Unfortunately, the choir stalls are at the other end of the building to the organ so it can be tricky to coordinate the music. However, it was a great occasion despite the sweltering heat that saw one tenor wilting towards the end of the service.
Anyway, back to this week's anthem. When looking at the psalms set for this week, I spotted the words of a rather well-known anthem - "They that go down to the sea in ships : and occupy their business in great waters ; These men see the works of the Lord : and his wonders in the deep." The setting of these words by Sumsion is one of my favourite anthems. Not everyone shares my opinion of course. The section 'stagger like a drunken man' can be taken as a bit daft but I think it's fun. Finding these lines wasn't really a surprise because my choir sang this anthem last week. It was 'Sea Sunday' after all.
I didn't try and do my own version of this part of Psalm cvii (107) but rather the opening using these words:
Words for Anthem 28:
O give thanks unto the Lord for he is gracious : and his mercy endureth for ever
Let them give thanks whom the Lord hath redeemed : and delivered from the hand of the enemy ;
And gathered them out of the lands, from the east, and from the west : from the north, and from the south.