Tuesday, June 26, 2012

The Return of the Lamb - A Musical Theodicy


The Return of the Lamb

(The score and a video are at the end of this blog)


A Lamb is gentle and soft. A Tiger (Tyger) is fierce, hard, deadly and dangerous. How could the same God make the lamb and the tiger? How could an all loving and omnipotent God make both?How dare He?When he made the Tyger was He pleased with what he had made?
Welcome to a musical theodicy - a very light weight attempt to use music to vindicate "the goodness of God in the face of the existence of evil".
William Blake's two poems The Lamb and The Tyger state the problem facing theodicy in chilling clarity.
The music is very short and in three parts.
The words in the first part are extracts from The Lamb.
The words in the second part the second part are from The Tyger.
The third part is music and words
I wrote the music for the first two parts: the music for the third part is universally loved and in the public domain.
Here is a suggested setting:
Imagine a Cathedral. It is night. The Cathedral is full. At the front is a full choir with a small orchestra (including a kettle drum). There are two standing microphones - one on the left in front of the choir, the other on the right in front of the choir.
The lights in the Cathedral fade until there is complete darkness and silence (the despair of unresolved theodicy).
Suddenly the organ sounds a dischord (g augmented against F minor). four times - going from loud to soft - there is silence (the pain unsolved theodicy flowing into the silence of despair because there is no answer).
Next the problem of theodicy is expressed in music.
The darkness is broken by a single spotlight that gradually gets stronger. The spotlight is focused on a singer  standing in front of the left microphone. The singer sings The Lamb – gently:


Little lamb who made thee?
Dost thou know who made thee?
Gave thee such a tender voice
Making all the vales rejoice.
The spotlight fades.
The darkness is broken by a second spotlight that gradually gets stronger. It is focused on a singer standing in front of the right microphone. The singer sings The Tiger – low voice:

Tyger, tyger burning bright
In the forest of the night.
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the lamb make thee?

The spotlight fades.
Darkness.
A third spotlight lights up.  As a kettle drum begins to roll the spotlight gets stronger. It is focused high above the altar - on the Cross. The resolution music starts building up to a crescendo. The choir sings:
(Slow majestic march tempo)

Jerusalem! Jerusalem!
Sing for the night is o’er

Hosanna in the highest,

Hosanna for ever more!

Hosanna in the highest,

Hosanna for ever more!


A hope of the Christian is that the problem of theodicy will be resolved when Christ returns – at the Return of the Lamb.
Here is a video of the music. Very amateurish!

Here is the score for the three parts:





For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.       1 Cor. 13:12

Please feel free to use this music and setting.

I realize the music needs fixing up!
My hope is that a fixed up professional version will be sung in St James’s Church. Piccadilly. London, where William Blake was baptized.
Thank you.

John Bartels
Port Elizabeth
South Africa
July 2012

Note: In June 2012, I was advised that the music for the Holy City was in the public domain. Advised by “The Performing Rights Limited” in London Tel: 0208 378 7500