Minstrel Boy Old Irish Air, The Moreen Arranged by Julian David Bryson SATB Choir and Piano
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
Text The minstrel boy to the war is gone, In the ranks of death you’ll find him. His father’s sword he hath girded on, And his wild harp slung behind him. “Land of Song!” cried the warrior bard, “Though all the world betrays thee, One sword, at least, thy rights shall guard, One faithful harp shall praise thee!”
Minstrel fell! But the foeman’s chain Could not bring that proud soul under; The harp he loved never spoke again, For he tore its chords asunder, And said, “No chains shall sully thee, Thou soul of love and bravery! Thy songs were made for the pure and free; They shall never sound in slavery!”
Program Notes Thomas Moore’s lyrics describe an iconic “warrior bard,” committed to defending not only land, but ideals. For him, freedom of thought, speech, and art was more important than his life, and this strong and creative soul preferred death to oppression. While this tune has long been associated with memorials for first responders, I also see it as a call to arms for artists. Through images, sound, and other media, we offer unique perspectives on the world around us. We challenge prejudice, power, and ignorance. In short, we engage in cultural warfare, inspiring people to think deeply and critically about their world. In this setting, the opening stanza floats above an accompaniment reminiscent of plucking harp strings. A wall of sound develops, ushering in the crucial statement of praise and defiance. Another crescendo, undergirded by diatonic cluster chords in the piano sets up the death blow, but as in any good action movie, time slows to a crawl. Here, the audience focuses not on the warrior, but on his primary weapon—the harp. What follows clarifies that the nation’s true loss is in stripping a powerful and creative voice from its future. Indeed, lost future accomplishments are the true, greatest, and often unnoticed cost of war. Join all artists on the battlefield of ideas with harp and song and voices. —J.D.B. SATB setting premiered March 13, 2010 by the Huntsville Community Chorus Association TTBB setting premiered February 25, 2014 by the University of Kentucky Men’s Chorus Cover image by Ruth Archer, https://pixabay.com/en/users/LunarSeaArt‐4038246/ This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
Minstrel Boy Thomas Moore (1779-1852)
SOPRANO
ALTO
The Moreen, Irish Air Arranged by Julian David Bryson
q = 60
pp
tm* tm tm tm tm tm tm tm...
TENOR
tm tm
pp
BASS
tm* tm tm tm
ppp
tm tm tm
tm tm...
tm tm tm tm...
*tm is pronounced with a dental "t" and long "u" sound as in, "plume". Close immediately to the "m", but maintain cavernous space inside your mouth. The sound should mimic a plucked, Irish harp.
7
tm tm...
tm tm
q = 60
Piano
tm tm tm
The
min
mp
-
strel
boy
to the war
is
gone,
in
the
mp sub. pp mp sub. pp
mp
sub. p
Copyright © 2009 Julian David Bryson (Revised 2/8/2014) AllPlease rights reserved. Licensed through MusicSpoke.com. This score is not licensed for performance. visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies. License is non-transferrable. Director should have a copy of the license to legally use this music.
4
13
ranks
of
death
you'll find
him
(m)
p
pp
p
19
mp
tm tm
fa - ther's sword he hath gird - ed tm tm...
tm tm tm
tm
p
His tm tm
tm
tm tm
tm...
tm... tm...
on, And his
wild harp
slung
be - hind
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
5
27
him
(m)
"Land of Song!"cried the war rior bard,"Though all the world f
f
be-
"Land of Song!"cried the war rior bard,"Though all the world be f
f
ah
33
ah
f
to purchase performance copies. This score is not licensed for performance. Please visitMusicSpoke.com
6
mp
42
trays
thee,
thee,
at
least,
mp
tm
tm tm
tm
tm...
p tm
tm
tm
p
tm tm
tm tm tm tm
tm
tm
tm
tm tm
thy
rights
shall
tm
tm
tm...
tm tm tm
tm...
ful
harp
-
p
shall praise
One
tm tm tm tm...
tm
guard,
tm tm tm
faith
49
One sword,
trays
thee!"
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
55
ff
ff
Min - strel ff
63
proud
soul un
-
proud
soul un
-
der;
der;
The harp he
loved nev - er spoke a -
Oo
mp
from silence
to silence
fell! But the foe- man's chain
ff
ff
foe- man's chain could not bring that
7
to silence
gain, from silence
mp
Oo
For he tore its
chords a
sun -
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
mp
p
mp
8
73
And
And
der;
83
shall sul - ly thee,
said,"No chains
mp
Thou mp
Thou
said, "No
chains shall sul - ly thee, Thou
to silence
They shall nev - er mp
love and
and
brav - 'ry!
-
sound
v'ry!"
in sla
Sla
-
sound
-
v'ry!
Sla -
in sla
-
sound
v'ry!"
Thy songs were
They shall nev - er
p
mp
mp
They shall nev - er f
brav - 'ry!
of love
made for the pure and free
of
in sla
They shall nev - er mf
soul
sound
brav - 'ry!
and
of love
soul
p
soul
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
v'ry!"
in sla -
92
molto rit.
Sla
-
v'ry!
Sla
v'ry!
Sla - v'ry!
-
v'ry!"
v'ry!
Sla -
molto rit.
A tempo
ff
"Land of ff
rit.
ff
v'ry!
A tempo
mp
at
thee,
rit.
Oo mp
A tempo
the world
be - trays
the world be
-
trays
harp
shall
mp
least, thy rights shall guard, One faith - ful
mp mp
One sword,
A tempo
Song!" cried the war - rior bard, "Though all
ff
thee,
"Land of ff
101
Song!" cried the war - rior bard, "Though all
mf
9
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
10
110
praise
thee!"
ppp
119
tm...
One faith - ful pp
One faith - ful
harp ppp
harp
shall praise
shall praise
tm...
thee!"
tm...
ppp
to silence
to silence
to silence
rit.
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
to silence
If you enjoyed Minstrel Boy, please also consider the following works for mixed or TTBB chorus from my catalog, available at or coming soon to MusicSpoke.com:
Commissioned to celebrate the ordination of a deacon, All Things New (SATB Choir and String Quartet or Piano) speaks to the human desire to improve ourselves and our world. Built upon a handful of symbolic musical motives, this piece yearns, grows, and eventually comes to rest transformed and inspired.
Fire and Ice (SSATB, a cappella) along with Quibbles and Quirks for wind quintet and Conflictions for brass quintet, began as exercises in counterpoint. Though I didn’t conceive of them as a set, upon further reflection, I see them as having remarkable similarities. All are for five voices, involve imitation, and represent conversations. Fire and Ice, in particular, takes the well-known poem and weaves it into a dialogue—at times an argument—inviting both choir and audience to take sides. Because the text is so familiar, I didn’t concern myself with clarity in its setting, instead focusing on the similar vowel sounds central to key words. This leaves the conclusion up to the audience’s decision, even as late as the final chord, where both fire and ice sound simultaneously.
Lacrimas (SATB with mezzo-soprano solo, a cappella) weaves the familiar Psalm text, "They that sow in tears will reap in joy" into a poignant moment from St. Augustine's confessions: "And sending out tears, where I was holding them in, so that they should flow so smoothly, they spread out beneath my heart and it rests on them." Musically, the piece develops in waves that emanate from the opening “sobbing” gesture. The University of Alabama in Huntsville Chamber Choir premiered the work under the direction of Dr. Erin Colwitz-Dehning as part of the Huntsville New Music Festival of 2011.
O nata lux (SATB, a cappella): On September 12, 2001, members of the University of Tennessee Concert Choir walked into our choir room in a state of shock. Reeling from the previous day’s attacks, none of us really wanted to rehearse, but somehow we knew it was exactly where we needed to be. After warm-ups, we sang Morten Lauridsen’s setting of O nata lux, which we had just begun to learn. Suddenly, the music took on a new meaning and ushered in a memorable hour of sharing, crying, and healing. Something about the line, “for the sake of the lost ones” stuck with me, and over the next several days, I developed my own musical response to both the tragedy and text that had invaded all of our lives. I am humbled by so many beautiful settings of this prayer and in some ways feel ill-equipped to offer yet one more. However, I continue to count it among my favorite compositions. This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.
Winner of the 2013 American Choral Directors Association Brock Memorial Student Composition Competition, Redemption Mass (SATB chorus, wind quintet, piano, and percussion) is a tuneful, rhythmic, and inspiring setting of traditional and nontraditional texts. The simple, yet haunting Kyrie evokes ancient chants, while the rhythmically driving Gloria uses overlapping ostinato paints a picture of the Heavenly throne room described in Isaiah 6 and Revelation 4. Credo is an exuberant statement of faith filled with text painting, while the most accessible movement, Sanctus, is an uplifting song of praise again referencing the scene in Isaiah 6. Finally, Agnus Dei recalls themes from previous movements of the Mass against a stunning wall of sound, erupting into a passionate plea for peace.
This accessible setting of We Are the Music Makers (SATB and piano) brings O'Shaughnessy's famous text to life through lush harmonies, word painting, and exciting fanfares. Dedicated to the Randolph High School Class of 2011, it was premiered by their Concert Choir during their Commencement ceremonies.
Commissioned and premiered by Louisville's Youth Performing Arts School Gentlemen's Ensemble, under the direction of Jacob Cook, for the Intercollegiate Male Chorus Festival of 2014 hosted by Rutgers University. ‌with music‌ (TTBB, SATB, or SSAA Choir and Piano) combines two previously unpublished songs by Kentucky Composer (and graduate of Louisville's Manual High School) John Jacob Niles. Come Gentle Dark and Epitaph provide a poignant look into the composer's later views on life and death interwoven with beautiful melodies and subtle harmonic surprises.
This score is not licensed for performance. Please visit MusicSpoke.com to purchase performance copies.