We all put new words to old tunes, but sometimes they don't quite fit. Some of you will have heard Chris Walker's story (which I may have slightly mis-remembered) about the organist who was caught out when he used the Old Hundredth ("All people that on earth do dwell") for a hymn containing the following couplet:
Here lowly, at the hour of prayer, Before Thy throne I bow.
I've been working on BBC Songs of Praise for the last three years (contract ended last Friday – sob!). In an editorial meeting for a seaside programme, I suggested (tongue in cheek!) that we sing There's A Wideness in God's Mercy (like the wideness of the sea) to the tune of Rod Stewart's Sailing. All thought it was a wonderful idea and took it very seriously. I am now anxiously awaiting the particular programme – I mean they can't really...can they?
For years, I've been using "In Christ there is no East or West" to the tune of "While Shepherds Watched...". Raises the occasional smile but works.
BTW, did you know that – working solely from the various published planners – it's possible to sing Aurelia eight weeks out of 15 between 22nd Sunday of the Year and the 1st Sunday of Advent (10 if you use it for two different hymns on Sundays 30 and 33). O God of earth and altar, O Jesus Christ remember, O God thy people gather, The Church's one foundation. It's a long story how/why I came to work it out!
Does anyone have the rest of the words for that lovely old song, The Church's one foundation, Max Factor Number Two....?
Merseysider wrote:For years, I've been using "In Christ there is no East or West" to the tune of "While Shepherds Watched...". Raises the occasional smile but works.
followed, presumably, by "westward leading, still proceeding" etc?
Contradbordun wrote:References to Full in the panting heart of Rome surely belong on the Good Old Days Thread...don't they?
I've never heard of 'Full in the panting heart of Rome', or of anywhere else for that matter.
Does this mean it must have been before my time? Please say it does! I'm feeling particularly ancient today and it would do my heart (not panting, I hasten to add) good to think that I'm not so old, after all.
TT
P.S. I suppose I should confess that I was singing in a choir during the '80s, but we certainly didn't sing that one.
Apparently Full in the Panting Heart of Rome was requested by a group using the Cathedral not too long ago! I think the music was unavailable or something like that.
TT - pre Vatican II so you are obviously young. (Does that make you feel better?) If you are going to the Summer School, ask someone to play and sing it for you. I am not going to the Summer School as it clashes with something else but I am sure someone could sing it for you.
I'll ask at Summer School. I suppose I'd better not use the opening gambit "Are you old enough to remember 'Full in the Panting Heart of Rome'?", else I might get more than I bargained for!
ROTFL!!!!! I'd just psyched myself up for a reflective, prayerful experience in the Dance Workshop, but the idea of a bunch of us enacting 'full in the panting heart' has completely dispelled that idea.
not sure how much scope there is for enacting - can't remember very much of it and have just failed to find it on Google, but it's more a travel brochure than an aerobics soundtrack, (though there is that line about "pilgrims lips that kiss the ground").
have to confess I liked the tune though - would somebody please write some words for it?
musicus is going to have a fit when he reads this thread, sorry i've been off-topic-ing like mad this afternoon