We thank you Jehovah

by ballistic 19 Replies latest jw friends

  • ballistic
    ballistic

    When the new song book "Sing Praises to Jehovah" was introduced from the great publishing company in 1984, it was clearly and frankly admitted (suprisingly) that some of the old songs had to be dropped due to the fact they were copied from other religions and some even infringed copyright in this regard.
    However, from an early age "We thank you Jehovah" had always reminded me of "God save the Queen" and this song was not dropped and continues to be regularly used down to this day.
    I realise in later life that the two songs are indeed similar in a musical sense. You can almost play one song on top of the other in places and the starting chord structure is identical.
    Also, the two songs both seem to have a certain feeling of reverence which I am not sure is conjured up by the timing and the harmony alone or by the meaning the songs have in terms of their lyrics and use.
    It turns out the British tune has been used many times over by different people and even by other countries, as European visitors to Britain in the eighteenth century noticed the advantage of a country possessing such a recognised musical symbol - including Germany, Russia, Switzerland and America (where use of the tune continued after independence). Some 140 composers, including Beethoven, Haydn and Brahms, have used the tune in their compositions.

    God save our gracious Queen!
    Long live our noble Queen!
    God save the Queen!
    Send her victorious,
    Happy and glorious,
    Long to reign over us,
    God save the Queen

    How glad I am to be able to sing this song with pride instead of the Dub Dubbed version. This is one of those "outed-dub indulgencies" which is often under-rated.
    Ballistic - Sponsored by "Kingdom Melodies"

  • Beck_Melbourne
    Beck_Melbourne

    Hi ballistic

    Now that you mention it...I can see the similarities. Even though we weren't allowed to sing our national athem at school...I somehow can recite it word for word with ease. Unfortunately...I am the same with the Kingdom Melodies...I remember the tune and the words like it were yesterday. What a waste of room that memory takes up in my head...I say 'be gone'

    Beck

  • Guest 77
    Guest 77

    Ah, the looney 'tunes.' In Canada a looney is a dollar and it talks!

    Guest 77

  • rekless
    rekless

    We had an elder who was of the annointed. He was a musician.In the 40s, 50, he worked in Hollywood as a composer and his wife sung background and work with Les Brown, Bob Hope, Roy Rogers.

    My point is this: He and his wife could not stand the new song book and songs.He often would state these are the dumbest songs the arrangements are written as if nobody knows how to write music and the bridges are just terrible.

    I know one song was a off beat of a Christmas song, but I can not remember which song it is. I used to sing the xmas words while the cong. was singing the WT remdition. My wife used to punch me and my kids used to grinn. OOOOOhhhh the memories of my family. I do miss them.

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  • terafera
    terafera

    I dont know how God saves the Queen goes, but I do remember 'We thank you Jehovah' and can remember thinking it sounded awfully familiar when we sang it.

    Come to think of it, I'm not a composer, but it seemed many of the Kingdom Melodies were hard to sing... they went real low then went straight up high, causing your voice to break.

    Remember that one song? Dont remember the words..but the damn melody was crazy..went reallll low then upppp real high.
    Something like:

    (in very low voice) Dark days are here. Mankind in fear.
    Things are all hell-a-cious, kids are too pre-co-cious.

    (in very high voice) But the Bible gives us hope for the dead.
    We love our God Jehovah instead.

    (then goes back to low and high parts). It was insane!!

  • Beans
    Beans

    Ahh the bad memories! Yes this was the last song played at the assemblies, the sorrow of the last song signifying the few moments left to spend with our bretheren before the next assembly! That sad sad feeling in my heart that it would be six months before I make my next move on the hot single sisters in the flowered dresses which ran to there ankles.

    Beans

  • ballistic
    ballistic

    Does anyone remember when the new song book came out, those embarassing moments of silence throughout the songs where everyone
    a. had never heard the song before and didn't know how it went
    b. couldn't possibly work out where the challenging and un-predictable melody was going
    c. If they could read music, didn't want to be either a smart arse or the only person singing.

  • Beans
    Beans

    Ahh the bad memories! Yes this was the last song played at the assemblies, the sorrow of the last song signifying the few moments left to spend with our bretheren before the next assembly! That sad sad feeling in my heart that it would be six months before I make my next move on the hot single sisters in the flowered dresses which ran to there ankles.

    Beans

  • ballistic
    ballistic

    Beans? Was that repetition for emphasis?

  • GermanXJW
    GermanXJW

    What about "Keep Your Eyes on the Prize!" (no. 222) taken right from Walt Disney's Snowwhite and the seven Dwarves.

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