|
A Time to Greet Our Neighbors Through Music in
Liturgy
Vespers, one of the two main hours of the Church's
Daily Office, has roots extending into the evening prayers of
ancient Israel. Lucernarium (literally: Lamp lighting time)
was another name for these periods of devotion which began at the
rising of the evening star with a blessing prayer. The Book of
Common Prayer preserves the evolution of these early forms of
worship and prayer in a way that is faithful to our heritage and
open to creating new traditions.
Jazz Vespers emerges as a synthesis of traditions, a
blending of an age old liturgy with the unique musical language we
call jazz. With a freshness that is open to God's Spirit, this
musical tradition sounds the hopes, dreams, joys, frustrations and
pain that expresses human experience, while exploring a musical
vocabulary that transcends the limits of the written or spoken
word. |