Thursday, December 27, 2018

A Family Christ Mass (Dane Gordon-Milford Fargo)--Third Presbyterian Church, Rochester NY (1973)



From a local Goodwill, a two-LP set housed in a single jacket with a booklet enclosed--a Christmas Mass with music by the late Milford Fargo, who was an associate professor of Music Education at the Eastman School of Music.  Fargo was a close friend of Alec Wilder and conducted Wilder's Children's Plea for Peace on the Turnabout label.  Fargo's Mass was recorded at the the Third Presbyterian Church in Rochester NY on Dec. 24, 1972

, and the  booklet has a 1973 copyright date, so I'm going with that.

The text is by Dane Gordon, who apparently is still with us, and who a Google check identifies as an emeritus professor of philosophy from Rochester Institute of Technology and a retired Presbyterian minister.  Gordon was born in London and served in the Royal Navy during WWII.

This was the most complicated ripping and labeling task I can recall.  To get the track info and artist credits as close to correct as possible, I had to consult the booklet provided, the labels, and the back cover for any inconsistencies or omissions.  In the final band on Side 4 (the Agnus Dei), five titles flow together without a break, so track-marking was tricky.

The Kyrie ("Lord Have Mercy Upon Us") is probably my favorite part--simple but moving.  Don't be thrown off by the brass when it enters in another key--that's intended as a modern touch.  I think.

As Gordon points out in the booklet, "The mass is traditionally divided into Five parts: Kyrie Eleison, Gloria in Excelsis, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei."  So the booklet lists all five in all-caps, with no subtitles.  The labels, deciding not to cooperate, use all-caps and subtitles, except for the Credo, which isn't all-caps and has no subtitle.  A small deviation, but enough to throw things off.

The texts are... interesting.  They contain lines like "When Adam was a soldier, he went to war one night.  He launched a guided missile and said, 'Let there be light.'"  And "So Joseph took the little babe, and off they rode to Egypt.  And Mary mixed some lemonade, Because she thought they'd need it.  Tra la, tra la, tra la la la, tra la.  And Mary mixed some lemonade, Because she thought they'd need it."

From Wake Up Early: "Take a photograph.  Leave yourself out of it.  Take a photograph when nobody is there.  Jump down an oil well.  Wait for tomorrow.  The glory of God is the bite in the air."

In the notes, the author explains, "A Family Christ Mass is an attempt to present this ancient form of worship with contemporary ideas and music of many styles.

"Christ was interested in the details of his everyday life.  This Mass touches upon details of today's life using words and music that are intended to relate to all members of a family."

I'm too tired to argue.  Because there are two LPs and a slew of scans, I broke things down into three zips.



A Family Christ Mass (Gordon-Fargo), recorded 1972 (PCI Recording Services USR 5164, 1973

ZIP FILE 1: Sides 1 and 2  

ZIP FILE 2: Sides 3 and 4
ZIP FILE 3: Jacket, labels, booklet




No way I'm listing all the titles!  Please consult scans....



Lee





14 comments:

Buster said...

Sounds like the music will be enjoyable, but the words will be mystifying. One out of two isn't bad.

Ernie said...

Well now, this looks different... :) Right up my alley!

Kwork said...

Interesting. Thanks Lee.
Now that I'm caught up with Ernie, for a few hours anyway, time to visit all the other Christmas blogs. That way I'll have Christmas music to last the year through. For me, Christmas music is a genre, not a season.

Unknown said...

Indeed Dane is still living, although facing many health challenges. My husband and I and 2 sons sang in that presentation. It was wonderful and we still remember parts and reminisce about it. Can I hear it from your site, My email is Kramsay80@yahoo.com.
Thanks, Kay Ramsay
Please use google and yahoo email to respond

Unknown said...

My husband and I and 2 sons sang in that presentation.....and still reminisce about it. Dane is still living, but struggling with health issues.
Please also send response to kramsay80@yahoo.com

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Kay, Thank you very much for letting me know. I'll get in contact with you soon. Very sorry to hear about Dane. I'll be in touch soon. Best,

Lee

satrams said...

Hi, Lee. Thank you so much for doing all the work involved in putting all this up! I am Scott Ramsay, Kay's oldest son (of 4).
She is not quite correct- my parents did sing in the chancel (senior) choir, but I and my brothers did not sing, although I believe I was there for much of the group rehearsals and came to know the music as if I had, and remember most of it to this day. (I was 9 or 10)
I had been searching for the past few years for this audio. We originally owned the LP's, but they were accidentally discarded.
I had actually talked with Dane Gordon about the Mass at church (I currently attend 3rd and have been singing with my parents in the choir for about 12 years), and if it ever had or will be done again- it doesn't seem so, sadly.

I was also going to borrow his LP's and get them copied, but never got around to doing so.

I personally think the music and the message in the Mass is great, and the melodies have stayed with me all these years. I also found a copy of the score which my parents had used.

This music truly fits into your category of something you would never hear. But I don't completely understand why that is the case. Unfortunately, I have been made aware of murky and undocumented controversy or scandal (I have heard specific accusations which I will not repeat) revolving around the composer, Milford Fargo, who went on to write a couple more commissioned musicals for our youth groups- that I and my brothers did participate in- the 1st being, "Pilgrim"- based on "A Pilgrim's Progress". I have the sense that he seems to have partially become 'persona-non-grata' in the Rochester music world (for possibly deserved, or undeserved reasons- I don't know). I do not know this for a fact.
I feel it is unfortunate (and that it is unfortunate for Dane Gordon) that an otherwise deserving work seems to have been permanently relegated to obscurity- or less.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Hi, Scott. Sorry I haven't gotten back to Kay yet--crazy day (and night). I should be asleep, and I hopefully will be in a short while. Fascinating info, and so sorry to hear about Fargo's fate. Quite depressing, as I loved this work. My late foster mother was an English prof at OSU, and she told me it took a special genius to write for young readers. I think ditto for young musicians. So much of this reminded me of Ralph Vaughan Williams' "Hodie," but I'll have to finish the thought later. Will get back to you. Feel free to email me (my link should be up in my profile), and I'd be more than happy to send you the record if you wish. Just say the word. Best,

Lee

Unknown said...

This was also performed at the Eastman School's Eastman Theater perhaps in November or December of 1972. Milford Fargo, the composer and an associate professor at the Eastman School conducted the three vocal choirs, the jazz band, the bell choir, and the antiphonal brass choir. I was in the "teen choir" and remember every single word, note and nuance of this beautiful mass. There was a recording of that performance too which I may have somewhere in my archives. Milford Fargo was a wonderful composer, teacher and human being. M Musiker, ESM 1975

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Thanks so much for the information and for sharing your experience!

Anonymous said...

Milford Fargo was my chorus teacher at Samuel A. Lattimore School No. 11 in Rochester. He was one of my favorite teachers.

Anonymous said...

Im pleased to have come across this. I attempted to download the zip files but was prompted that they were illegal. I guess illegal to my Mac safari browser. I would be very interested in the music and text files as I was a part of this recording singing with Milford Fargo and the Eastman Children's Chorus and being selected from that larger choir to sing in this and other recordings at the third Presbyterian church in the early 70's. Hughgaspar@gmail.com Thank you in advance!

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Hugh,

Hi! My former hosting service decided to ban all of my uploads, and for unknown reasons. At the moment, I have to be careful not to deplete the hosting options of the moment. But, come Jan. 1, I will revive these three zip files, because by then my downloading bandwidth allowance will have renewed for the month. So, give me five days and I'll have this back for you. Thanks for dropping by! Great to hear from people involved in this wonderful performance.

Lee Hartsfeld said...

Hugh,

The links should work now. Please click on "Zip File 1," "2", and "3." Box.net should allow you to download. If it doesn't, then I'm afraid I have no way of resharing. Retrieving the files and setting up the links was an hour's work. Not your fault, of course! But the reason I'm calling it quits if the hosting service fails to work. Apologies, if it does.