Joy to the World
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"Joy to the World" is an English hymn and Christmas carol. It was written in 1719 by the English minister and hymnist Isaac Watts. It is usually sung to the American composer Lowell Mason's 1848 arrangement of a tune attributed to George Frideric Handel. The hymn's lyrics are a Christian interpretation of Psalm 98 and Genesis 3.
Since the 20th century, "Joy to the World" has been the most-published Christmas carol in North America, even though it was not originally associated with Christmas. Template:As of, it was published in 1,387 hymnals in North America, according to the Dictionary of North American Hymnology.<ref name=popular>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
HistoryEdit
OriginEdit
"Joy to the World" was written by English minister and hymnist Isaac Watts, based on a Christian interpretation of Psalm 98 and Genesis 3. The song was first published in 1719 in Watts's collection The Psalms of David: Imitated in the Language of the New Testament, and applied to the Christian State and Worship.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The paraphrase is Watts's Christological interpretation. Consequently, he does not emphasize with equal weight the various themes of Psalm 98. In first and second stanzas, Watts writes of heaven and earth rejoicing at the coming of the King. Watts did not write this hymn as a Christmas carol, as the lyrics do not reflect the Virgin birth of Jesus, but rather Christ's Second Coming. Stanza three, an interlude that alludes to Genesis 3:17–19 rather than to the psalm text, speaks of Christ's blessings extending victoriously over the realm of sin. The cheerful repetition of the phrase "far as the curse is found" has caused this stanza to be omitted from some hymnals. But the line makes joyful sense when understood from the New Testament eyes through which Watts interprets the psalm. Stanza four celebrates Christ's rule over the nations."<ref name=hymnary>"Joy to the world, the Lord is come!", Hymnary.org</ref> The nations are called to celebrate because God's faithfulness to the house of Israel has brought salvation to the world.<ref>"Joy to the World!", Worship Leader Magazine – via Internet Archive</ref>
MusicEdit
{{#invoke:Listen|main}} Watts's 1719 preface says the verses "are fitted to the Tunes of the Old Psalm-Book" and includes the instruction, "To the Common Tunes sing all entitled Common Metre."Template:Sfn It is not clear whether "Old Psalm-Book" means Playford's 1677 publication or some other. Sternhold and Hopkins's "old version" and Tate and Brady's "new version", among others, circulated at that time as well. In the late 18th century, "Joy to the World" was printed with music several times, but the tunes were unrelated to the one commonly used today.<ref>For example to the tune "Warsaw" in Samuel Holyoke's Harmonia Americana, 1791 (p. 87)</ref>
The tune usually used today is from an 1848 edition by Lowell Mason for The National Psalmist (Boston, 1848).<ref>"Celebrate, Rejoice and Sing: Christmas Music in America", Roger L. Hall, PineTree Press, 2003, p. 8</ref><ref name=hymnary /> Mason was by that time an accomplished and well-known composer and arranger, having composed tunes such as "Bethany" and "Hamburg", which were used for the hymns "Nearer, My God, to Thee" and "When I Survey the Wondrous Cross". Mason's 1848 publication of the current tune was the fourth version to have been published. The first, published in his 1836 book Occasional Psalm and Hymn Tunes, featured the present day tune (in a different arrangement) with the present-day lyrics, the first such publication to do so. The name of this tune was given as "Antioch", and was attributed as being "From Handel".<ref>Mason, Lowell. "No. 72: Antioch", Occasional Psalm and Hymn Tunes, 1836, p. 70 – via Internet Archive</ref> A very similar arrangement of the tune to today's arrangement, and also with the present-day lyrics, was published in Mason's 1839 book The Modern Psalmist. It was also titled "Antioch" and attributed to Handel.<ref>Mason, Lowell. The Modern Psalmist, 1839, p. 144.</ref>
Musically, the first four notes of "Joy to the World" are the same as the first four in the chorus "Lift up your heads" from Handel's Messiah (premiered 1742), and, in the third line, the same as found in another Messiah piece: the arioso, "Comfort ye". Consequently, and with Mason's attribution to Handel, there has long been speculation over how much a part Handel's Messiah had in "Joy to the World".<ref>Hugh Keyte and Andrew Parrott, eds., The Shorter New Oxford Book of Carols (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993)</ref> The limited resemblances between Messiah and "Joy to the World", have been dismissed as 'chance resemblance' by Handel scholars today.<ref>The Cambridge Handel Encyclopedia, Annette Landgraf, David Vickers, Cambridge University Press, 26 November 2009. "Joy to the World" entry by Nicholas Temperley</ref> However, the possibility of a common source antedating Antioch, Handel, and Mason alike may suggest that resemblances are more than coincidental. Handel was a native German and a Lutheran before he moved to England in 1712 aged 27, and most likely was familiar with his denomination's hymnic repertoire. In addition, it is known Mason was a great admirer and scholar of Handel's music, and had in fact become president of the Boston Handel and Haydn Society in 1827<ref>Pemberton, Carol Ann (1971), Lowell Mason: His Life and Work (doctoral dissertation, University of Minnesota), ProQuest Dissertations & Theses 7128272. Revised in Studies in Musicology no. 86, 1985, Template:ISBN, Ann Arbor, UMI Research Press</ref> and was also an editor for them.<ref>Mason, Lowell. The Modern Psalmist, 1839, p. 5.</ref> The possibility of a common source is described in the next paragraph.
Several tunes have been found from the early 1830s closely resembling that of "Antioch", the earliest of which was published in 1832 under the title "Comfort" (possibly as a nod to Handel's "Comfort ye").<ref>Charles Rider, Psalmodia Britannica, vol. 4 (ca. 1831), no. 87, p. 949</ref> This would make it at least four years older than Mason's first publication of "Antioch". Other publications from the early 1830s further suggest the tune may have been around for some time before Mason published his arrangement. Thomas Hawkes published the "Comfort" tune in 1833 in his Collection of Tunes. In it, the attribution was given simply as "Author Unknown", suggesting it may have been older.<ref>Thomas Hawkes, Collection of Tunes (Watchet: Thomas Whitehorn, 1833)</ref><ref>Fenner, Chris. "Psalm 98 – Joy to the World with 'Antioch' ('Comfort')". HymnologyArchive.com, 22 March 2019.</ref> A 1986 article by John Wilson also showed "Antioch"'s close resemblance to an 1833 publication of "Comfort" and its associated Wesley hymn "O Joyful Sound".<ref>"The Origins of the Tune 'AntiochTemplate:'", bulletin no. 166 of the Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland; a summary is given in The Oxford Book of Carols 1994, p. 273</ref> In any case, there is no evidence to suggest that the tune is older than Martin Luther's "Vom Himmel hoch da komm ich her", a Christmas chorale of which Antioch appears to be an expanded paraphrase. This resemblance suggests Vom Himmel hoch as a common source and also may explain the widespread use of "Joy to the World" as a Christmas hymn.
A version by the Trinity Choir was very popular in 1911.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Relevance inline Template:As of, "Joy to the World" was the most-published Christmas hymn in North America.<ref name=popular/> <score sound raw> % Source: Lowell Mason, "The Modern Psalmist" (1839), No. 144 % https://archive.org/details/modernpsalmistco00maso/page/143/mode/1up % Also: http://cantorion.org/music/3710/Joy-to-the-World-Voice-SATB \header { tagline = ##f } \layout { indent = 0
\context { \Score \remove "Bar_number_engraver" } \context { \Voice \remove "Dynamic_engraver" }
} global = { \key d \major \numericTimeSignature \time 2/4 \autoBeamOff}
soprano = \relative c { \global
d4 cis8. b16 | a4. g8 | fis4 e | d4. a'8 | b4. b8 | cis4. cis8 | d2~ | d4. \bar "" \break \repeat unfold 2 { d8 | d [cis] b [a] | a8. [g16 fis8] } \bar "" fis8 | fis fis fis fis16 [g] | a4. \bar "" g16 [fis] | e8 e e e16 [fis] | g4. fis16 [e] | fis8\( d'4\) b8 | a8. [g16] fis8 g | fis4 e | d2 \bar "|."
}
alto = \relative c' { \global
fis4 a8. g16 | fis4. e8 | d4 cis | d4. a'8 g4. g8 | e4. e8 | fis2~ | fis4. \repeat unfold 2 { fis8 | fis [a] g [fis] | fis8. [e16 d8] } d8 | d d d d16 [e] | fis4. e16 [d] | cis8 cis cis cis16 [d] | e4. d16 [cis] | d8 \(fis4\) g8 | fis8. [e16] d8 e | d4 cis | d2 \bar "|."
}
tenor = \relative c' { \global
d4 d8. d16 | d4. b8 | a4. g8 | d4. d'8 | d4. d8 | a4. a8 | a2~ | a4. r8 | R2*4 | r4 r8 a8-. | a-. a-. a-. a-. | a2~ | a2~ | a4. d8\ppp | d4. b8 | a4 a8 [g] | fis2 \bar "|."
}
bass = \relative c {
\global d4 d8. d16 | d4. g,8 | a4 a | d4. fis8 | g4. g8 | a4. a8 | d,2~ | d4. r8 | d,4 r | d r | d r | d r | r r8 d'8-. | d-. d-. d-. d-. | a'4. a,8-. | a-. a-. a-. a-. | d4. d8 | d4. g,8 | a4 a | d2 \bar "|."
}
verse = \lyricmode {
Joy to the world, the Lord is come! Let earth re -- ceive her King; Let ev' -- ry heart pre -- pare Him room, \repeat unfold 2 { And heav'n and na -- ture sing, } and hea -- ven, and hea -- ven and na -- ture sing.
}
\score {
\new ChoirStaff << \new Staff \with { midiInstrument = "trumpet" } << \new Voice = "soprano" { \voiceOne \soprano } \new Voice = "alto" { \voiceTwo \alto } >> \new Lyrics \with { \override VerticalAxisGroup #'staff-affinity = #CENTER } \lyricsto "soprano" \verse \new Staff \with { midiInstrument = "trombone" \consists "Merge_rests_engraver" } << \clef bass \new Voice = "tenor" { \voiceOne \tenor } \new Voice = "bass" { \voiceTwo \bass } >> >> \layout { } \midi { \tempo 4=102 }
} </score>
LyricsEdit
"Joy to the World" has four verses, although the third verse is occasionally omitted.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Failed verification
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- "Joy to the World", SATB sheet music, Cantorion.org
- "Joy to the World", americanmusicpreservation.com
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