Sounds of localisation in South African Anglican church music

Author(s):  
Andrew-John Bethke
Early Music ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 348-349
Author(s):  
D. Wulstan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Marie Jorritsma

This chapter explores persistent traces of both indigenous and Euro-colonial music traditions in the church music of South African coloured people (a group of mixed racial heritage that was marginalized and oppressed by the apartheid regime). The author characterizes these persistent historical traces in coloured people’s performance style as “hidden transcripts” (following James Scott). Through the powerful historiographic tool of ethnomusicological listening, this chapter points to colonial as well as “African” traces surviving in contemporary musics and locates both encounter and resistance in contemporary performance styles, even those most closely related to colonial repertoires.


Author(s):  
Paul Rodmell

In 1889 Frederick Harford, a canon of Westminster Abbey, and Charles Villiers Stanford, then one of the United Kingdom’s leading composers, entered into a fractious argument in the pages of The Musical World regarding the manner in which the Nicene Creed should be set to music for use in Anglican communion services. This article sets out the terms of this argument by examining Harford’s proposed guidance, initially directed at aspiring composers of church music, which covered matters of doctrine, syntax, and verbal accentuation. The responses of Stanford and other correspondents are then scrutinized, as is the fallout from the episode, which included the widespread canvassing of eminent clergymen on the niceties of Harford’s argument, and a competition for new settings, organized by The Musical World. This is followed by an examination of Stanford’s own settings of the Creed, most particularly those in B flat, Op. 10, and in F, Op. 36, and the responses to Harford’s guidance that can be seen in contemporaneous settings of the text by other composers. The intricate aspects of this debate are put into the wider context of the changing status of music and musicians, and evolving liturgical practices and attitudes to the employment of music, in the Anglican Church of the Victorian era.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 266-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah Gaitskell

AbstractIn the late 1960s, the South African Anglican Church set up a new women's organisation, the Anglican Women's Fellowship (AWF). With strong roots in the Cape and Natal, the AWF aimed to be more inclusive of all churchwomen than the international Mothers' Union (MU) where, at that time, membership was still closed to divorcees and unmarried mothers. MU locally had also become an African stronghold, which may have reinforced the qualms of white and Coloured women about joining. Based on some documentary sources and participation in the fourday AWF Provincial Council of October 2002, this paper explores the changing composition, goals and ethos of AWF over its 35-year history. Comparisons with other churchwomen's organisations—the (black) Methodist Manyano and (white) Women's Auxiliary as well as the MU—will be drawn to highlight what is distinctive about AWF and its response to social change in contemporary South Africa. While the article concludes by providing a brief snapshot of theology and practice within the movement, the striking current role of Coloured women leaders as bridge-builders is particularly emphasised and the effective crossing of racial, social, language and age boundaries evaluated.


Author(s):  
Ian Bradley

Arthur Sullivan is almost certainly the best loved and most widely performed British composer in history. Although best known for his comic opera collaborations with W.S. Gilbert, it was his substantial corpus of sacred music which meant most to him and for which he wanted to be remembered. Both his upbringing and training in church music and his own religious beliefs substantially affected both his compositions for the theatre and his more serious work, which included oratorios, cantatas, sacred ballads, liturgical pieces, and hymn tunes. Focusing on the spiritual aspects of Sullivan’s life, which included several years as a church organist, involvement in Freemasonry, and an undying attachment to Anglican church music, Ian Bradley uses hitherto undiscovered or un-noticed letters, diary entries, and other sources to reveal the important influences on his faith and his work. No saint and certainly no ascetic, Sullivan was a lover of life and enjoyed its pleasures to the full. At the same time he had a rare spiritual sensitivity, a simple and sincere Christian faith, an unusually generous disposition, and a unique ability to uplift, soften, and assure through both his character and his music that can best be described as a quality of divine emollient.


1960 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Hinchliff

The Provincial Synod of the Church of the Province of South Africa met for the first time in 1870. A long controversy, of which the Colenso law-suits were the core, had made it plain that the Anglican Church was not, and could not be, an established Church in South Africa. The chief task of the synod was to provide some alternative machinery of government and a constitution which could legally serve as a contractual basis for the exercise of the Church's discipline. There were before the synod two documents of primary importance—the draft constitution which the South African bishops had been preparing since 1861, and the report of the first Lambeth Conference.


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