I am looking for a tune suitable for a 66 66 D trochaic text, in particular, "O what light and glory," a translation of O quam glorifica by T.I. Ball. Most 66 66 D (or 12 12 12 12) tunes are iambic. A verse of the poem is below.
O what light and glory Deck thee, all resplendent, Thou of royal David Glorious descendant; Mary ever-virgin, Who in heaven art dwelling, All the choirs of angels Evermore excelling!
How about if you splice RAVENSHAW (Monk) and RIMBAULT together to make eight lines? It sounds pretty good to me even if there would be a full cadence in the middle.
Why not try GRAF (originally 76.76.D or 77.77.D), altered to 66.66.D by putting one syllable on the first two beats of every even numbered measure (which is what I did in every fourth measure to get 76.76.D out of 77.77.D)?
Hymnary.org gives this hymn as a 66.66 metre (not 66.66.D), to the tune LEOMINSTER -- apparently also called S. Alban's (330) -- from S. Alban's, Holborn, Tunebook. Here is the full text:
O what light and gory Deck Thee all resplendent, Thou of Royal David Glorious descendant!
Mary ever Virgin, Who in Heav'n art dwelling, All the choirs of Angels Evermore excelling.
Mother, yet the honour Of a Virgin bearing, For the LORD of Angels Dwelling pure preparing.
Him within Thy bosom Chastely thou enshrinest, Thus our God Incarnate Takes His Flesh divinest.
May His pity grant us For our darkness sending, With Thee in His Glory Joy and light unending.
Hear us, Holy Father, Through Thy Son supernal, With the Holy Spirit, LORD and God eternal.
In The Antiphoner and Hymner of St. Gregory the Great Orthodox Church, this hymn is given as the Evening Hymn for Assumption.
O what light and glory Deck thee, all resplendent, Thou of royal David Glorious descendant; Mary ever-virgin, Who in heav'n art dwelling, All the choirs of angels Evermore excelling!
Mother, yet the honor Of a virgin bearing, For the Lord of angels Dwelling pure preparing; Him within thy bosom Chastely thou enshrinest; Thus our God incarnate Takes His flesh divinest.
Whom the whole creation Evermore adoreth, And all lowly bending Rightly now imploreth, May His pity grant us, Far our darkness sending With thee in His glory Joy and light unending!
Hear us, holy Father, Through Thy Son supernal, With the Holy Spirit, God and Lord eternal; Who with Thee in glory Liveth and abideth, Who the world and all things Governeth and guideth. Amen.
Using my trusty Liber hymnarius table, I found only one tune that matches your meter (though not suavely) on p. 565, Hugo pius pater. Older sources may have more.
I kept hearing it to something of the character of GENEVAN 42 or VULPIUS. Still thinking of writing one myself that fits shape of this poem specifically, but VULPIUS adapted to 66 66 D (calling it MELCHIOR...?) sort of works.
Alright, I couldn't resist because I love this text so much. I took two approaches: one was to compose a [very] simple original melody for the text (something that a congregation could learn on-the-fly), and the second was to adapt the chant Hugo Pius pater that Richard found. I find myself particularly fond of the chant-based version. Something about it is so haunting and beautiful (I say this in acknowledgement of the original melody; not that I've achieved anything in my own right). Feel free to use/share; SATB scores and demo recordings attached.
O What Light And Glory (BOTH VERSIONS) • SATB 5.66 .pdf
127K
Oh! What Light and Glory! (Organ Demo, both versions) • James Richardson.mp3
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