Responsorial Psalm for Wedding : How Good is the Lord to All (???)
  • francis
    Posts: 11,175
    Never seen this before as a choice for Wedding Responsorial Psalm... does anyone know where it comes from?
    Thanked by 1JonathanLC
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,627
    It seems to be on the USCCB list
    There are 7 options for the Responsorial Psalm at a Nuptial Mass. We encourage you to spend time in prayer with your fiancé/e to choose the psalm which best speaks to your hopes and dreams for your Christian marriage.

    The earth is full of the goodness of the Lord (Psalm 33)
    I will bless the Lord at all times (Psalm 34)
    The Lord is kind and merciful (Psalm 103)
    Blessed the man who greatly delights in the Lord’s commands (Psalm 112)
    Blessed are those who fear the Lord (Psalm 128)
    How good is the Lord to all (Psalm 145)
    Let all praise the name of the Lord (Psalm 148)
    Thanked by 1JonathanLC
  • rich_enough
    Posts: 1,076
    This is a new translation of the response to psalm 145; the previous version ran "The Lord is compassionate to all his creatures" (later "works").
  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 641
    Here is a setting of Psalm 145 I've just written, with the refrain "How good is the Lord to all", as it appears on the USCCB site, with Revised Grail text. Verses written out to tone 8; simple refrain.

    It was occasioned by a couple who went ahead and printed several hundred copies of their program, and then asked for permission/proofreading. Mercifully, this was the only minor issue, and now maybe some of you might find this useful in a similar situation.

    Psalm 145 How Good is the Lord to All weddings.pdf
    66K
  • @Gamba, I've used your Psalm refrain melody as the basis for an arrangement I just created for use at an upcoming wedding. I hope this is ok :-) I credited the antiphon melody as "PJF" since that is on your score.

    Here it is in case you'd like to see it, or in case it is helpful to anyone else!
    Psalm 145 How good is the Lord to all (wedding).pdf
    37K
    Thanked by 2CHGiffen Chrism
  • GambaGamba
    Posts: 641
    Sydney, I’m flattered; nicely engraved!

    Two very small things for future users.
    1) The psalm tone (8G) is not the work of WLP; it is an old-as-time psalm tone, but I think you’ve put in the WLP harmony underneath, which is certainly functional, but may be a breach of copyright.

    2) I harmonized the refrain as follows, assuming do is A-flat as in your transcription:

    Eb.................... Eb/Db..Ab/C.........Db/Bb...Eb7
    (gathering tone) How good is the Lord to all.

    To each their own, but I’ve never met a 7th chord I haven’t liked, and find moving the bass under important words keeps the people moving in my echo chamber of a church.
    Thanked by 1Chrism
  • I'm so glad you approve, thanks! I like your suggestion of the moving bass, I think I may incorporate that into a revised version :-)

    Yes, I "borrowed" the WLP harmony here...I do this regularly when I arrange things for our parish since we own WLP books that include "blank" psalm tones which I assume are meant to be used for such purposes. That is a good point to note for anyone else who may wish to use my arrangement (or for myself/our parish in general, in case my use of the harmonizations is not exactly legal). Do you know of any good sources for public domain harmonizations of the Gregorian psalm tones? I do not usually have the time or creativity to write my own.
  • I just stumbled across this discussion. In answer to the question for public domain harmonizations of the Gregorian psalm tones: if one looks at the Nova Organi Harmonia, Volume 1 (the Propers), the Introits all have a harmonized psalm tone verse. The entire NOH is here as individual pages: https://www.ccwatershed.org/nova/

    You can use http://www.gregorianbooks.com/propers.html to find an Introit in the psalm tone you want, then use the CCW link to the NOH to find the Introit by incipit. For instance, the Advent I Introit, Ad te levavi, is in tone VIII (https://archive.ccwatershed.org/media/pdfs/16/12/14/15-53-46_0.pdf). Its psalm verse is on the next page (https://archive.ccwatershed.org/media/pdfs/16/12/14/15-54-25_0.pdf).

    Or if you want other harmonizations of the Introits, you can look at the various other organ accompaniments to the propers found at ccwatershed.org.

    I hope that helps.
    Thanked by 1francis
  • davido
    Posts: 1,150
    Here is my edition of Gamba's psalm posted above.
    Nuptial Mass, C-6.pdf
    349K
    Thanked by 1Gamba
  • Gaudium
    Posts: 53
    Bringing this to the top, to see if there have been any other settings of this Psalm 145 for weddings. I usually use Source & Summit or the Chabanel psalmody, but neither have it. I'm hoping for a simple, clean copy with a refrain that can be placed nicely into a program...
  • m_r_taylor
    Posts: 360
    @Gaudium Composed another basic refrain, PNG and GABC text for your perusal.

    (c3)How(e) good(efe) is(g) the(h) Lord(ih) to(fg) all.(f.e.) (::)

    Let me know if you would like a setting of the verses.
    How good is the Lord to all refrain.png
    3000 x 394 - 63K
    Thanked by 1Gaudium
  • Gaudium
    Posts: 53
    @m_r_taylor: yes, please, I would love a setting of the verses. Do you have an organ accompaniment (or I can add one)?
  • m_r_taylor
    Posts: 360
    Here are verses. Organ up to you!
    Psalm 145.pdf
    23K
  • I composed this setting for my daughter's wedding a few years ago.
    Psalm 145 How good is the Lord to all.pdf
    67K
    Thanked by 1francis