Psalm 130 to Cheshire

This past Sunday — Passion Sunday — was not an All-Age Service, or anything else requiring exceptional liturgy, and so it was back to metrical psalms with a congregational response.

I was pleased with this setting of Psalm 130. The tune I chose is one that we’ll be using on Palm Sunday and which is not terribly well known in the congregation, so sneaking it in as the psalm is one way of getting people used to it. I’m also very fond of the harmony. That said, the dotted rhythms mean it does need to be taken quite slowly in order that the words don’t get swallowed up.

I did stumble at first over the beginning of the last stanza:

“And plenteous redemption
is ever found with him.”

At first glance this doesn’t seem to have the right number of syllables. There should be eight in the first line and six in the second, right? But I know from singing other music that pronunciation has changed; the word “redemption”, which most people now pronounce with three syllables, would have had four. The choir were happier to sing it with four syllables than change the rhythm of the music to make it fit, so that’s what we did.

Here’s the response, taken as usual from the last line of the melody:


And if you want the whole thing, you can download a .pdf file. I played the verse first, then the choir sang the response once through, then the congregation sang it. This seems to work well.