The Crucifixion: Stainer's Invention of the Anglican Passion and Its Subsequent Influence on Descendent Works by Maunder, Somervell, Wood, and Thiman

The Anglican Passion is a largely forgotten genre that flourished in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Modeled distinctly after the Lutheran Passion- particularly in its use of congregational hymns that punctuate and comment upon the drama-Anglican Passions also owe much to the rise...

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description The Anglican Passion is a largely forgotten genre that flourished in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Modeled distinctly after the Lutheran Passion- particularly in its use of congregational hymns that punctuate and comment upon the drama-Anglican Passions also owe much to the rise of hymnody and small parish music-making in England during the latter part of the nineteenth century. John Stainer's The Crucifixion (1887) is a quintessential example of the genre and the Anglican Passion that is most often performed and recorded. This article traces the origins of the genre and explores lesser-known early twentieth-century Anglican Passions that are direct descendants of Stainer's work. Four works in particular will be reviewed within this historical context: John Henry Maunder's Olivet to Calvary (1904), Arthur Somervell's The Passion of Christ (1914), Charles Wood's The Passion of Our Lord according to St Mark (1920), and Eric Thiman's The Last Supper (1930). Examining these works in a sequential order reveals a distinct evolution and decline of the genre over the course of these decades, with Wood's masterpiece standing as the towering achievement of the Anglican Passion genre in the immediate aftermath of World War I. The article concludes with a call for reappraisal of these underperformed works and their potential use in modern liturgical worship.
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title The Crucifixion: Stainer's Invention of the Anglican Passion and Its Subsequent Influence on Descendent Works by Maunder, Somervell, Wood, and Thiman
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