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19557998
Take Up Your Cross
19557998
19557998

Take Up Your Cross by Austin C. Lovelace 4-Part - Sheet Music

By Austin C. Lovelace
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Take Up Your Cross by Austin C. Lovelace 4-Part - Sheet Music
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SATB choir, organ - Easy

SKU: PL.0610

Composed by Austin C. Lovelace. Parish. Choral, General, Lent. Octavo. Paraclete Press #0610. Published by Paraclete Press (PL.0610).

* organ part introduces the anthem with the melodic motive, which women's voices then sing in unison * a key change and the low/mid-range tessitura of men's voices portray the strength of the middle verse * the final verse is sung as a canon doubled by the organ, ending with four part harmony in D Major to depict the hope of the glorious crown * easily learned by the choir and organist, this anthem will be excellent for the Lenten season as well as for any commissioning or missions Sunday service

By urging the congregation to "Take up your cross," this easy setting is perfect for a Sunday following Easter. The first verse is for women, then an accompanied four-part setting. This is followed by a modulation that is antiphonal between SA/TB voices. The predominantly two-part writing continues into the fourth verse, which declares that "only those who bear the cross may hope to wear the glorious crown," an ideal post-Easter message. The music is very easy but well-crafted. - "The Diapason" May 16, 2006
Austin Lovelace is a distinguished American Methodist church musician, who is held in high regard not least for his work with the American Guild of Organists and the Hymn Society of America. His setting of four verses of Charles Everest's hymn could not be simpler, and is mostly in unison or two parts, with a supportive organ accompaniment, and all voices sing in the centre of their ranges until a final tenor top F sharp. Its simplicity is its strenth, and the writing is such that a small and comparatively inexperienced choir would sound thrilling as it approached the climax with its promise that those who 'bear the cross' may 'wear the glorious crown.' - James L. Montgomery "Church Music Quartet" March 2006.

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