Eight Hymns of Isaac Watts Sheet Music | Brian Joyce | SATB Choir
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Eight Hymns of Isaac Watts Digital Sheet Music
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Eight Hymns of Isaac Wattsby Brian Joyce SATB Choir - Digital Sheet Music

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If you ever need a break from the "soundbyte theology" found in so many contemporary Christian lyrics, why not revisit the words of Isaac Watts (1674-1748), who could stretch a single coherent thought across multiple verses of his hymns? Watts was a prolific writer on many subjects, including geography, astronomy, ethics, and psychology. His book on Logic became a standard university text, being used at Oxford for over 100 years. But his greatest desire was to assist Christians in the worship of God and it is his hymns for which he is best remembered today.

These old words are here set to new music which represents a blending of three different traditions: First, and most obvious, is the rustic sound of early American shape-note singing. Second is the strong linearity of 13th century Ars Antiqua voice leading, in which each part was more or less independent. And third is my own fondness for mixed meters and sonorities built on fourths and seconds. Yet it all works somehow: these are actually very singable hymns once the choir has acclimated to the style. Most fall comfortably into a simple diatonic language and would present no jarring problems for the listener. Five of the hymns are for standard mixed voices (SATB); one is for mens voices (TTB); one for womens (SSA) and the last, a Doxology, is in six parts (SSATTB) with a florid threefold amen.

There is admittedly a certain sameness about these settings; perhaps its best if they are not all sung in one go, cover to cover. Taken individually, however, there is no reason they couldnt make for a refreshing change from the usual church anthem, and a group of three or four could easily find a place on a choral recital program.

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