"Bring Flowers of the Fairest"
Much as I love it, the same can be said for 'If Ye Love Me'.... Tallis did write other things....Sicut Cervus needs to...
I think that people who have the resources, human, literary, and talent-wise, to have a larger repertory don't repeat SC and IYLM as much as do those who are less well endowed. The appeal of these to the less proficient is that they are both astoundingly good music, absolutely glorious little gems, and yet they are relatively easy as polyphony goes (they practically sing themselves!) and for some represent a 'major work' in their repertory. Bravo for them! And, for those who are more proficient, don't neglect to do these at least once or twice a year!...many, many other...
Ha! Perhaps my sentiments about TFN would be better expressed in another thread of a year or two ago, namely, 'Guilty Pleasures'. I have always liked 'The First Nowell' precisely because it is so awful. With its mangled English (a sin to which renaissance Englishmen are entitled and which is, yes, fun to sing and make sense of [and fun to fit to the melody!]), and a wildly exuberant melody, it is almost Gilbert & Sullivanesque. Somehow it works as a very grand hymn of no little literary substance (though less than scholarly expressed). It is the perfect 'recessional' for Christmas at midnight or Christmas Day. It's not too bad for the Epiphany, either. And! It should never be rushed but should be sung at a very dignified pace....put my finger on it...
Many of the saints including St. Louis De Mondfort, referred to Mary’s Psalter and the Rosary beads as flowers, particularly roses and even more so as the prayers we offer up.
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