Unitarian Society of Northampton and Florence
Order of Meeting:
Summer Service of 26 June 2005
"How Shakespeare Tells Us Who We Are"
David Mix Barrington and Kat Lovell
Welcome and Announcements
Prelude: Tarleton's Riserrection Dowland
Chris Stetson, lute
Lighting of the Chalice
*Hymn: #330 The Arching Sky of Morning Glows
*Opening Words (unison)
"All the world's a stage
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts."
*Hymn: Old Hundredth
From all that dwell below the skies
Let songs of hope and faith arise
Let peace, goodwill on earth be sung
Through every land, by every tongue
De todos bajo el gran sol
Surja esperanza, fe, amor
Verdad, y belleza cantando
De cada tierra, cada voz.
*Community Greeting
Offertory: The Faerie's Dance Johnson
Meditation
Interlude: A Time For Us Rota
Karl Drumm, piano
Readings
Interlude Kemp's Jig Anonymous
Sermon "How Shakespeare Tells Us Who We Are"
David Mix Barrington
*Hymn: #17 Every Night and Every Morn
Closing Words
Postlude: Brush Up Your Shakespeare Porter
DAMB, vocal, Karl Drumm, piano
Thanks to Chris and Karl for the music, and to Tony Burton, Sally
Greenhouse, Kat Lovell, and Andrea Zucker for help with the verbal
parts and general inspiration.
Musical Notes (from Chris Stetson)
Shakespeare's plays contain numerous references to music,
and contemporary sources tell us that even more music and
dancing was part of his performances. The lute music presented
today all comes from Shakespearean England. Though John
Dowland (1563-1626) was one of the most famous composers of
his day, he failed to gain royal patronage, and spent many years
working on the Continent. His "Tarleton's Riserrection" is a
beautiful Galliard, probably a memorial for Richard Tarleton,
the jester to Elizabeth I also known as "Shakespeare's clown",
who died in 1588. While Dowland's music represents the "old school"
of English music, the music of Robert Johnson (1582-1633) was
cutting-edge for the time. He worked both at court and in dramatic
productions and almost certainly knew Shakespeare. His "Faerie's
Dance" might well have been used in a production at the Globe Theater.
Finally, the anonymous "Kemp's Jig" is most likely named for another
Shakespearean clown, Will Kemp, and may well commemorate his "Nine
Daie Wonder" of Morris dancing from London to Norwich.
After his death, Shakespeare's plays continued to inspire musicians
as well as actors; from Felix Mendelssohn to Nino Rota (1911-1979),
who wrote the music for Franco Zefferelli's 1968 film version of
"Romeo and Juliet", to Cole Porter (1891-1964), whose song "Brush Up
Your Shakespeare" is from the Broadway show "Kiss Me Kate".
Last modified 27 June 2005