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Try to Remember

“Try to Remember” Cardinal Vaughan Schola Cantorum

🌿 “Try to Remember”: A Gentle Ballad of Nostalgia and Human Longing Few songs have captured the essence of wistful reflection as powerfully and delicately as “Try to Remember.” First introduced to the world in the 1960 off-Broadway musical The Fantasticks, this simple ballad has endured across decades and generations, finding its way into concerts, recordings, films, and hearts. Written by Tom Jones (lyrics) and Harvey Schmidt (music), the song is not only a melodic invitation to remember—but also a tender meditation on the impermanence of time and the resilience of memory. 🎭 Origins in The Fantasticks The Fantasticks is a minimalist theatrical gem, famously performed with just a handful […]

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Pie Jesu

“Pie Jesu” Cardinal Vaughan Schola Cantorum

✨ “Pie Jesu”: The Innocence of Prayer Through a Child’s Voice There are few musical experiences as profoundly moving as hearing “Pie Jesu” sung by a young soloist. Whether set by Gabriel Fauré in his Requiem or reimagined in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s modern oratorio, the simple Latin text—“Pie Jesu Domine, dona eis requiem”—has inspired some of the most tender, ethereal melodies in the choral tradition. His voice emerges not with grandeur, but with reverence and fragility. What follows is not a display of vocal power, but of emotional honesty. 🕊️ The Meaning Behind the Music“Pie Jesu” is one of the final sections of the traditional Latin Requiem Mass. The phrase

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Pie Jesu

“Hear My Prayer” Cardinal Vaughan Schola Cantorum

“Hear My Prayer”: Mendelssohn’s Sacred Lament and the Art of Supplication in Song There are certain works in the choral canon that transcend time, language, and culture—pieces that speak not only to the mind but to the soul. Among them stands Felix Mendelssohn’s Hear My Prayer, a masterpiece of sacred music that has captured hearts for nearly two centuries. Blending lyrical beauty with spiritual yearning, this motet, particularly renowned for the aria “O for the wings of a dove,” remains one of the most beloved works in the treble choral repertoire. 🎼 The Composer and the Context Felix Mendelssohn (1809–1847), a German Romantic composer, was both a prodigy and a

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