6 February 2011
5th Sunday after the Epiphany
Conductor: Jason Anderson
Reader: Joel Matter
Cantor: Tym Mackey
ORISON: "Eternal light, shine in my heart" (Ach bleib bei uns, melody by Samuel Scheidt [1587 - 1654]; harmonized by Seth Calvisius [1556 - 1615])
PSALMS: 134 & 4 (Peter Hallock)
HYMN: "All praise to thee, my God, this night" (Thomas Tallis [ca. 1505 - 1585])
NUNC DIMITTIS: (setting by James Bassi)
ANTHEM: "Beati quorum via" (Charles Villiers Stanford [1852 - 1924]; arranged for men’s voices by Richard Barnes)
13 February 2011
6th Sunday after the Epiphany
Conductor: Jason Anderson
Reader: William Turnipseed
Cantor: Thomas Adams
ORISON: "Thy mercies fill the earth, O Lord" (Psalm 119, Alice Parker [b. 1925])
PSALM: 119: 1 - 16 (plainsong, Tone II Ending 1)
HYMN: "Help us, O Lord, to learn" (tune: St. Ethelwald, William Henry Monk [1823 - 1889])
NUNC DIMITTIS: (setting by Lodovico Grossi da Viadana [1560 - 1627], Tone VI)
ANTHEM: "I give you a new commandment" (John Sheppard [ca. 1515 - ca. 1559])
20 February 2011
7th Sunday after the Epiphany
Conductor: Jason Anderson
Reader: Joel Matter
Cantor: Kenneth Peterson
ORISON: "If ye love me" (Thomas Tallis [ca. 1505 - 1585])
PSALM: 119: 33 - 48 (Peter Hallock)
HYMN: "Book of books, our people’s strength" (tune: Liebster Jesu, melody by Johann Rudolph Ahle [1625 - 1673]; altered in Das grosse Cantional oder Kirchen-Gesangbuch [1687]; harmonized by George Herbert Palmer [1846 - 1926])
NUNC DIMITTIS: (anonymous setting arranged by Bernarr Rainbow [1914 - 1998]; Tone IV)
ANTHEM: "I Will Meditate" (Richard Proulx [1937 - 2010])
27 February 2011
8th Sunday after the Epiphany
Conductor: Jason Anderson
Reader: Jeremy Matheis
Cantor: Richard Greene
ORISON: "Now as the troubled day departs" (words and music by M. Searle Wright [1918 - 2004])
PSALM: 91 (plainsong, Tone IV Ending 4)
HYMN: "Te lucis ante terminum" ("Before the ending of the day") (Compline office hymn, Mode VIII, Orlando di Lasso [ca. 1530/32–1594])
NUNC DIMITTIS: (anonymous setting, Tone VI)
ANTHEM: "Visita quaesumus" (William Byrd [1539/40 - 1623])