Salve Festa Dies – Sequence for Easter

One of the best parts about Easter? The music! So much joyful, triumphant music! In this post, I’m going to introduce you to an ancient chant that transitions us from the somber Holy Saturday to the exultant Easter Sunday:

Salve Festa Dies

This beautiful sequence is sung before the High Mass of Easter Sunday at our chapel. The text was written by Venantius Fortunatus in the sixth century, and the melody is Gregorian chant. Listen to a sample in the YouTube video below.

The translation of the chorus (refrain) is:
Hail, festal day, venerable of all ages
By which God conquers hell and holds the stars.

What you heard was monks singing without an organ accompaniment, but not all choirs are capable of singing a cappella and staying in the same key, verse after verse.  Two well-known composers who made harmonizations for many, if not all, of the sequences are Achille Bragers and Carlo Rossini. But neither of them wrote an organ accompaniment for Salve Festa Dies.  The reason is a mystery to me, but it challenged me to search for other accompaniments. I didn’t have much luck, as you’ll see later.

Before going on, here is the score for the Gregorian chant, if you’d like to try singing it: (Click on the image to enlarge it.)

Salve Festa Dies Chant

When I was asked a couple years ago to play Salve Festa Dies at our church, I had a hard time finding an accompaniment. Corpus Christi Watershed has one available, and if you’re interested, you can view it here.

Some of the religious did not like the chords that were chosen in that arrangement, however, so I tried to write one more to their taste. This is the result, and it’s a work in progress. I am an amateur at Finale (the music notation program I use), so I was not able to figure out how to write it in free form. The verse that I have is one that is not shown in the image above, and that’s why I chose it…might as well give you more verses to sing!

Latin text of the first six verses:

Refrain:

Salve festa dies toto venerabilis aevo
Qua Deus infernum vicit et astra tenet

Ecce renascentis testatur gratia mundi
Omnia cum Domino dona redisse suo (Refrain)

Namque triumphanti post tristia tartara Christo
Undique fronde nemus gramina flore favent (Refrain)

Qui crucifixus erat Deus, ecce per omnia regnat
Dantque Creatori cuncta creata precem (Refrain)

Christe, salus rerum, bone Conditor atque Redemptor
Unica progenies ex Deitate Patris (Refrain)

Qui genus humanum cernens mersisse profundo
Ut hominem eriperes es quoque factus homo (Refrain)

Funeris exsequias pateris vitae auctor et orbis
Intras mortis iter dando salutis opem (Refrain)

There are more verses! (21 in total, I believe!) If you are interested in reading the complete text, AND the translation, please visit this page on Catholic Culture.

Have a Blessed Easter!

 

Maiden Mother, Meek and Mild

Untitled design (4)

Sheet Music

PDF from Frog Music Press

Another version on Hymnary.org, with 2 extra verses

Maiden Mother by Erin McFarland

 

Audio

Click the orange play button below to listen. Please be patient if it takes a moment to load. 

A beautiful recording can be found at Catholic Devotional Hymns.

Lyrics

Maiden Mother, meek and mild,
Take, oh take me for they child.
All my life, oh let it be
My best joy to think of thee, Virgo Maria!

Teach me, when the sunbeam bright
Calls me with its golden light,
How my waking thoughts may be
Turned to Jesus and to thee, Virgo Maria!

Teach me also through the day
Oft to raise my heart and say,
“Maiden Mother, meek and mild,
Guard, oh guard thy faithful child”, Virgo Maria!

When my eyes are closed in sleep,
Through the night my slumbers keep,
Make my latest thought to be
How to love thy Son and thee, Virgo Maria!

Thus, Sweet Mother, day and night
Thou shalt guard my steps aright
And my dying words shall be:
“Virgin Mother, pray for me! Virgo Maria!”


 

Latin: Concordi lætitia

Sheet Music

PDF from CCWatershed

Audio

Concordi Laetitia • Organ Accompaniment from Corpus Christi Watershed on Vimeo.

Or, display Gregorian chant (instead of modern notation) and listen to audio together here.

Lyrics: Concordi Laetitia

1. Concordi lætitia, Propulsa mæstitia, Mariæ præconia Recolat Ecclesia: Virgo Maria!
2. Quæ felici gaudio, Resurgente Domino, Floruit ut lilium, Vivum cernens Filium: Virgo Maria!
3. Quam concentu parili Chori laudant caelici, Et nos cum cælestibus Novum melos pangimus: Virgo Maria!
4. O Regina virginum, Votis fave supplicum, Et post mortis stadium, Vitæ confer praemium: Virgo Maria!
5. Gloriosa Trinitas, Indivisa Unitas, Ob Mariae merita, Nos salva per saecula: Virgo Maria! Amen.

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