Psalm 147:1“a song ... a song of praise ...”
a song of praise addressed to God
A. Textual Characteristics of Good Hymns
- Faithful to the Scriptures
- Reverent and devotional: (I Pet. 1:15-16)
- Clear in expression of spiritual meaning (I Cor. 14:14-15;
Eph. 1:17-18)
- Poetic and lyrical in expression
- Simple inform with ease of movement
- High in quality (Phil. 4:8)
- Based on mutual experience
“The health and energy of Christian life should be strengthened
and Christian growth and development aided. Anemic, trite or sickly
sentimentalism make no contribution in this regard.”
B. Musical Characteristics of Good Hymns
- Strong tune: singable, easily learned, simple, logical form, pleasing rise and fall more – more steps than leaps, predominant use of basic note values, i.e. quarter notes
in 4\4 time, continuity and unity – it holds together
- Comfortable in range
- Unity of text and tune: accents, climax, mood
- Suitable change of harmony within the phrase
- Relatively longer rhythmic patterns
- A more melodic bass line and some melodic character to the
inner voices.
The text and tune should combine to impress the singer as providing a worship experience, not an entertainment.
C. Musical Characteristics of Inferior Hymns
- Excessive emphasis on unique or manneristic rhythmic elements: short rhythmic- melodic figures, syncopation, repeated long note short note patterns from phrase to phrase, “fast” waltz, fox trot or quick step
- Unnecessary chromaticism – “sliding” melodies
that “embellish” without a reason
- Infrequent change of harmony within the phrase
- Excessive “echo” effects
Musical elements must not call attention to themselves. They should
exist to support, enhance and elevate the meaning of the text.