Anthem
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Anthem
National anthem | Royal anthem | Football chant
An anthem is a composition to an English religious text. The
term has evolved to mean a song of celebration, usually acting as a
symbol for a certain group of people, as in the term "national
anthem". See below for other uses.
History
The word "anthem" is derived from the
Greek αντιφωνα through the Saxon antefn, a word which originally had
the same meaning as
antiphony.
It is now, however, generally restricted to a form of church music,
particularly in the service of the
Church of England, in which it is appointed by the rubrics to follow the
third collect at both morning and evening prayer. It is just as usual in this
place to have an ordinary
hymn as an anthem,
which may be a more elaborate composition than the congregational hymns. Several
anthems are included in the
English coronation service. The words are selected from Holy Scripture or in
some cases from the Liturgy, and the music is generally more elaborate and
varied than that of psalm or hymn tunes. Though the anthem of the Church of
England is analogous to the
motet of the
Roman Catholic and Lutheran Churches, both being written for a trained choir and not for the
congregation, it is as a musical form essentially English in its origin and
development.
The anthem developed as a replacement for the
Catholic "votive antiphon" commonly sung as an appendix to the main office to
the Blessed Virgin Mary or other saints. Though anthems were written in the
Elizabethan period by Byrd, Tallis and others they are not mentioned in the Book
of Common Prayer until 1662, when the
famous rubric In quires and places where they sing here followeth the Anthem
first appears.
Early anthems tend to be simple and
homophonic in texture, in order that the words could be clearly heard. Late in
the 16th century the "verse anthem," in which passages for solo voices
alternated with passages for full choir, began to evolve. This became the
dominant form in the Restoration period, when composers such as Henry Purcell
and John Blow wrote elaborate examples for the Chapel Royal with orchestral
accompaniment. In the 19th century Samuel Sebastian Wesley wrote anthems influenced by contemporary
oratorio
which could stretch to several
movements and last twenty minutes or longer. Later in the same century
Charles Villiers Stanford composed examples which used symphonic techniques
to produce a more concise and unified structure. Many anthems have been produced
on this model since his time, generally by
organists rather than professional
composers
and often in a conservative style. Major composers have tended to compose
anthems only in response to commissions and for special occasions; examples
include
Edward Elgar's Great is the Lord and Give unto the Lord (both
with orchestral accompaniment),
Benjamin Britten's Rejoice in the Lamb (a modern example of a
multi-movement anthem and today heard mainly as a concert piece) and (on a much
smaller scale)
Ralph Vaughan Williams' O taste and see, written for the
coronation of Elizabeth II. With the relaxation of the rule, in England at
least, that anthems should be only in English, the repertoire has been greatly
enhanced by the addition of many works from the Latin repertory.
References
- Peter Le Huray "Anthem" in Stanley Sadie, ed. The New Grove
dictionary of music and musicians (London: Macmillan, 1980)
ISBN 0333231112
- This article incorporates text from the
Encyclopędia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in
the
public domain.
See also
The following is a list of articles on other anthems:
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