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The Bright Daystar Is Comen

SATB/treble choral/piano score
PEL2099-Choir and Piano

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Instrumentation / Accompaniment
Page count
24
Perusal score

Instrumental part
PEL2099-IP

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Instrumentation / Accompaniment

A WORK FOR SATB/TREBLE OR SSA CHOIR WITH PIANO AND ORGAN

PEL2099 "The Bright Daystar Is Comen Of His Heav'nly Towers".

Originally scored for SSA choir with piano and organ, this arrangement of the traditional Scottish melody was expanded in 2018 to include SATB choir. This setting combines the Advent Prose with the Scottish melody set to the text by William Dunbar for Christmas. .


Commissioned by The New York City Children's Chorus to celebrate the choir's fifth anniversary.
Mary Huff, Director.

    Video
    'The Bright Daystar', comp. Halley, performed by New York City Children's Chorus, directed by Mary Huff

    The Bright Daystar Is Comen Of His Heav’nly Towers
     

    Rorate coeli desuper!
    Heavens, distil your balmy showers;
    For now is risen the bright Daystar,
    From the rose Mary, flower of flowers:
    The clear Sun, whom no cloud devours,
    Surmounting Phoebus in the east,
    Is comen of his heav’nly towers,
    Et nobis puer natus est.
     

    2 Sinners be glad, and penance do,
    And thank your Maker heartfully;
    For he that ye might not come to,
    To you is comen, fully humbly,
    Your soulès with his blood to buy,
    And loose you of the fiend’s arrest,
    And only of his own mercy;
    Pro nobis puer natus est.
     

    3 Celestial fowlès in the air,
    Sing with your notès upon the height,
    In firthès and in forests fair
    Be mirthful now at all your might;
    For passèd is your dully night;
    Aurora has the cloudès pierced,
    The sun is risen with gladsome light,
    Et nobis puer natus est.
     

    4 Sing, heaven imperial, most of height,
    Regions of air make harmony,
    All fish in flood and fowl of flight,
    Be mirthful and make melody;
    All Gloria in excelsis cry,
    Heaven, earth, sea, man, bird and beast;
    He that is crowned above the sky
    Pro nobis puer natus est.


    William Dunbar, (c. 1460—1530), one of the dominant Scottish Chaucerian poets closely associated with the court of King James IV. Dunbar produced a large body of work in Middle Scots distinguished by its great variation in themes and literary styles.

     

    Rorate caeli de super et nubes pluant justum.
    Drop down, ye heavens, from above,
    and let the skies pour down righteousness.

    (Isaiah 45:8)

    We have sinned, and are as an unclean thing, and we all do fade as a leaf:
    and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away: 
    thou hast consumed us, because of our iniquities. 

    (Isaiah 64:5-7)

    Comfort ye, comfort ye my people; my salvation shall not tarry:
    I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions:
    fear not, for I will save thee:
    for I am the Lord thy God, thy Redeemer.
    (
    Isaiah 40 & 41)

    Catalogue number
    PEL2099
    Duration
    05'00"
    Difficulty
    Uses / Season / Theme