Posted on 01/12/2013 5:03:32 PM PST by Kathy in Alaska
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It's in German, so it doesn't quite scan in English.
Welcome to the Canteen, wizr, and a Blessed Lord’s Day to you and yours.
Very good tagline.
Good evening, ML....a Blessed Lord’s Day and Shavua Tov to you and yours.
Lessons today? You and Linda go for a drive?
Both of my lessons today were cancelled due to illness.
Not me, the students. But I guess I would rather forgo the cash than come down with a rash. (Give up what I’m due so I don’t get the flu)
So Linda and I went yard saling instead.
Lovely!
Tell me, did Franz intend this to be Psalm 23, or did he originally write it as a paean to some faerie queen?
(Just a little joke based on some of our previous conversations! :-))
Nope. This is real. He wrote it in A-flat and set up the piano part to sound like angels’ harps. That’s supposed to be female angels singing.
You know, Like “Ave maria” originally being “The Lady of the Lake”.
(I am reminded of the Monty Python Scene in the “Holy Grail”, when the members of the workers agrarian collective question Arthur’s authority, because he claimed it as a result of the lady of the lake giving him Excalibur!)
I figured it was real. It just gave me a chuckle thinking of the other song! LOL
Thanks, Publius, for Schubert’s rendition of Psalm 23....easy listening.
And a Blessed Lord’s Day to you and yours.
This is written in Hebrew for a synagogue service. It has a rather interesting provenance insofar that it was thought to be lost until a few years ago.
Robert Mannheimer had the honor of being the rabbi to found the first new synagogue in Vienna in centuries. He was something of a reformer, and he chose a conservative cantor to keep his congregants happy.
Solomon Sulzer was the cantor, and he was invited to attend a Schubertiade, a party where Franz played the piano for dancing and also premiered some of his songs and other pieces. (The Schubert circle had no religious prejudices.) During a break at the party, Sulzer introduced himself to Schubert, and he sight-read Schuberts song The Wanderer to Franz accompaniment. Schubert said it was perfect but not flawless. Sulzer sang it a second time after Schubert showed him the slight changes he wanted him to make. This was a case of two professionals at work.
Now Sulzer approached Schubert with a commission. He had tried to approach Beethoven for a piece for the opening service of the synagogue, but the composer was on his deathbed, which tends to be a bad career choice.
Schubert got the commission for Psalm 92 but he knew not a word of Hebrew. Sulzer walked him through the words phonetically and showed him where the emphasis should be. The result could have opened a door for Schubert had he not died a year later. Death was the worst career choice Schubert ever made.
The piece was logged into Schuberts list of pieces, but it didnt show up until recently in a book of hymns for Jewish worship services. Its one of the oddest corners of Schuberts output.
I REALLY loved that low note at 4:07.
I am not used to hearing Jewish Liturgical music in a major key.
Even most Israeli Pop songs are in a minor key, or bounce between major and minor (kind of like “Blue Skies” by Irving Berlin)
“Osea shalom” is a prime example of that.
The flu seems to be everywhere. A couple at work have had it. I’m fighting tooth and nail not to catch a cold. Zicam is working very hard to help me in the fight.
And yard saling is always fun. When the season is over I’m going to start looking for a newer snow blower, and of course, something I didn’t know I needed.
Right now I’m trying to find a toaster that will take the odd shaped bread. Ours died, and its replacement from some dark recess in the garage won’t take the wider size bread...at least an inch sticks out.
Considerng the modern history of Judaism, if I were Jewish, I’d sing in a minor key too.
Fear Not,
Doubt Not,
Alwats look to Him.
A Blessed Lord's Day to you and yours.
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