Themes of the Passion hymns are woven together with impressions of the mockery of the crowds, as the Servant King makes the perfect offering of himself for the salvation of the world. Drawing its musical inspiration from fractured versions of traditional Paschal hymnody, but culminating in a hopeful realization of O Traurigkeit:
O Jesus blest, my help and rest
with tears I pray thee, hear me;
now, and even unto death,
dearest Lord, be near me.
—Tobias Stanislas Haller BSG
MP3 File
Lovely! You are most talented Brother Tobias!
ReplyDeleteTobias+,
ReplyDeleteThank you for you comments over at Derek's blog recently. They (along with others) have been most helpful in these last weeks of Lent. I am very grateful for your gifts of theological reasoning and expression.
Blessings to you and James for Holy Week and Easter,
Vicki+
Thanks, James, and Vicki+ -- may this Holy Week bring us many blessings...
ReplyDeleteLovely, Tobias. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteOh, Tobias, this is wonderful! Even though it is all yours, the Chorale near the end 'feels' to me like Bach,( well except for the cymbal crash at the end!) which is perfectly acceptable, of course. ;-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mimi and Susan. That last section was definitely inspired by the St Matthew Passion, so the resemblance isn't accidental.
ReplyDeleteA blessed Triduum and a glorious Easter to you.
Tobias, I've listened to your musical offering several times since you posted it, and I like it more each time I hear it.
ReplyDelete