“Let music swell the breeze. And ring from all the trees sweet freedom’s song.”
Hymn: “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee” – Samuel F. Smith (1808-1895)
Tune: AMERICA
Long before the term “surround sound” was coined, this hymn-line captured the essence of music coming at you from all directions. We musicians can picture this happening: we can see thousands of staves filled with quavers and semi-quavers swirling through the air, engulfing us with the richness of a great choral or symphonic sound. I personally think Eric Whitacre might be the composer of the sound I audiolize – that’s like visualize, but for sound!
It’s almost like a scene from Walt Disney’s FANTASIA… one of the pleasant, exuberant sections, not one of the scary ones! With a grand flourish, Mickey’s baton pulls sound from every direction: it is a cacophony of pitches, but they all make sense – they “make music.”
In this case, the song is one of freedom. “Do you hear the people sing, singing the song of angry men? It is the music of a people who will not be slaves again.”* People all around the world from every nation have had their freedom songs… their rallying cry set to music… at various times in their history. Their singing added to their resolve to do something about their incarcerated condition – their confinement to a situation from which there seems to be no escape.
This is a week to cherish our freedom as Americans: that’s why I chose a patriotic hymn. But it’s a time to be concerned for freedom of all God’s people who find themselves enslaved… traded, abused, neglected. Christian people cannot stand by and enjoy their freedom while others have none. Our concern must move us to action.
“Freedom! O Freedom! Freedom is coming, O yes I know.” (Traditional South African Song)
Listen to This Song
* - from the Broadway show LES MISERABLES (listen)
[Disclaimer: I realize this is not really a hymn as such; it is a
patriotic song. There is a danger on weeks like this to hoist the
flag in front of the cross and to miss the opportunity to worship and be
grateful to the One who gave us life and liberty at the same time. So,
I'm approaching it from the angle of "God... the Author of liberty" in
the final stanza.]
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