Psalm 34 New
Version is one of two well-known survivors from the New Version of the
metrical Psalms (see footnote). The tune, Wiltshire, was written by
Joseph Stephenson, who was Clerk of the meeting at the Unitarian Church in
Poole. He probably travelled the South teaching country choirs and selling
loose sheets of music. Thomas Hardy calls the tune "Old
Wiltshire" in The Mayor of Casterbridge.
Psalm 113 New
Version is set to Whitby tune in Holdsworth's Cheetham's
Psalmody, a tune collection made for the people of Halifax which became
more widely popular in the 19th century. We have added the interlude or
symphony, which is the short instrumental link between verses.
Anthem taken from
the 113th Psalm is a setting of the prose Psalm by Samuel Chapple, a
blind organist and composer from Dartmoor. As a boy he was sent to train
in music so that he could earn a living and not have to be kept at the
expense of the community. We first found this anthem in a MS in Jersey,
setting the French prose psalm, and later identified the source as
Chapple.
Dance: The
steps for Harper's Frolic were written down around 1800, and we
have chosen two jig tunes for the dance, the Heroes March from a
Somerset MS, and Naughty Miss which we have harmonised.
Harvest Home appeared
in the opera King Arthur (1691) by Purcell and Dryden, was included
by Sandys in his Festive Songs (1856), and in many folk-song
anthologies since. We have added a couple of verses written by Terry
Savage, one of our altos.
Creation:
Oratorios and operas often had big hit tunes in them, which gained an
independent life. One such was The Heavens are Telling from Haydn's
Creation (1800), which was arranged to make a hymn tune by several
people in slightly different ways, all called Creation. Our setting
comes from the Norwich Tune Book (1844), together with the symphony (1815)
by Bishop Simms of Birmingham. The words, a harvest hymn, were written
about 1837 by Jacob Brettell (1798-1862), a Unitarian Pastor.
The Barley Mow is
a traditional song toasting all those who contribute to its eventual
conversion into beer. Please join in.
Spanking Rodger comes
from the MSS of the Larks of Dean choir, a collection of about 50 MSS
containing over 1000 tunes that were used in Rossendale in the 18th and
19th centuries. This tune was composed by James Nuttall ca.1770, one of
the leaders of the choir. The Rodger of the title was a famous local
dandy; "spanking" describes him as a smart, fashionable dresser.
There is also a pub in the area named after him. The words are by Isaac
Watts (1674-1748), with an extra verse added by William Walter Shirley
about 1750.
Lonsdale tune
was adapted from a tune by Corelli, and became widespread. We have matched
it with words by Isaac Watts, his version of Psalm 133, together with some
on a similar theme by John Fawcett (1740-1818) from the Scottish Hymn
Book. Psalm 133 is known as the Fellowship Psalm, and was sung at meetings
of the Friendly Societies and Sick Clubs which grew up in the early 19th
century. There is a drum in Devizes museum which was used by the friendly
society band, with the first line of the Psalm painted on it. Oddly, the
drum was made in the front room of a pub, and when completed was too big
to get out, so it was kept in the room and played inside whilst the band
paraded outside the open windows.
The Gallant
Poacher is a short ballad, a protest song about the cruel fate of a
young poacher. It was collected in Dorset. The last poacher to be executed
for poaching was buried in North Baddesley churchyard, but it was the fate
of many poachers to be shot by a gamekeeper rather than tried by a court.
The Waterloo Dance
and The Isle of France or The Waterloo are two tunes from the
Pyle MS, used in Nether Wallop. From their structure, they are obviously
intended for the same dance, but the details of the original Waterloo
dance are lost. The first tune is well known, the second known only from
this MS. The Pyle band was quite successful, and the MS shows how later on
they played for society dances, a step up from the repertoire with which
they started.
Rule Britannia:
Dr. Thomas Arne (1710-78) wrote the tune for words by the poet James
Thomson (1700-48), and it was first performed as the finale of the masque,
Alfred, in 1740. Arne made his audiences in Drury Lane sing
patriotic songs, partly as a political statement around the time of the
second Jacobite Rebellion. To Arne's original symphonies we have wedded
the harmonisation by Vincent Novello (1781-1861), founder of the
publishing company. He was also organist at the Portuguese Embassy Chapel
in London, a little enclave of Catholicism long tolerated, since Portugal
was one of Britain's oldest allies.
Acknowledgements
Besides Cobbett's
own writings, in researching our scripts we have referred to:
The Jolly
Farmer? William Cobbett in Hampshire, 1804-1820, by Barbara Biddell,
Hampshire Papers No. 15, HCC, 1999, ISBN 1-85975-247-0;
Great Cobbett, The
Noblest Agitator, by Daniel Green, Hodder & Stoughton, 1983, ISBN
0-340-22378-2;
William Cobbett:
Englishman. A Biography by Anthony Burton, ISBN 1-85410-516-7.
A Footnote on The
Metrical Psalms
Henry VIII
encouraged Thomas Sternhold, John Hopkins and others to translate the
Psalms into verse for singing to popular tunes, mostly Long and Common
Metre. The Old Version was completed about 1598, and the Old 100th is a
well-loved example. The New Version by Tate & Brady, 1696, improved
the language, but its abstract style was not so relevant to country folk,
and the Old Version persisted alongside. Best known are Psalm 34: “Through
all the changing scenes of life”, and Psalm 42: “As pants the hart for
cooling streams”, and of course the Song of the Angels at the Nativity
of our Blessed Saviour Luke ii 8-15: “While Shepherds Watch’d”.