I asked the choir to come to morning rehearsal fifteen minutes early. Thursday night only about half the singers were brave enough to battle the yucky weather to work on the Rutter, and we had only a short rehearsal, dismissing early to get home before the next wave of snow hit.
This morning, we jumped right in, working first without the oboe to help everyone remember how the passages go, where the timing is tricky (triplets followed by eighths and ties all over), how to find starting pitches without help from the accompaniment. It is a more demanding piece than we usually tackle. But well worth the effort.
They stepped right up and worked hard, repeating the trickier parts, speaking the words in rhythm, asking for help with entrances. Then we added the oboe. They have the same reaction I did the first time I sang the piece. You are so drawn into the music as the oboe and piano unfold it that you forget to sing! The sopranos missed the first entrance just as I had done.
Isn't it great when you get so caught up in music? Imagine if I had also been able to get a harp! We reached a good place where everyone knew their part and what to do, and I didn't want to over rehearse, so we stopped even though we had a few more minutes before service.
Then it was time to process. The congregation was noisy, restless. We had to scramble to add a chair (what a great problem to have!), the opening hymn a bit bumpy. Suddenly it was time. The choir stood, and I looked at their faces, proud of the work they had done. I look at the pianist and oboe player, raised my hand, and the wash of beauty began. Each phrase was clear, each line of text well sung.
It was as if I were conducting and watching us at the same time, that unique experience of awareness and enjoyment simultaneously - a sort of floating, suspended outside of time. Yes, it is going well. Even when the timing gets a tad off, we stay together and recover within a few barlines. We sing the final "forever" and the music fades, dies away. The place is silent, savoring, wishing it could go on longer. Then the appreciative applause. Well done, choir! Well done, musicians!
We connect with millions of others who have been uplifted by Psalm 23 for centuries, and by thousands who have heard this setting. We connect with David of old and Jesus of newer and Paul and Augustine and Bonhoeffer and Schaeffer and that host of witnesses long since passed. And with each other. And we know. The Lord IS my shepherd, I shall not want. Amen.