Friday, March 25, 2016

Prayer In Gethsemane video

Here is a video for Prayer In Gethsemane that we put together showing various works of art throughout history depicting Christ's agony in the garden and other imagery associated with the lyrics of the piece.  It was a real joy working on this and discovering (or in some cases rediscovering) the many and varied inspirations that artists throughout history have drawn from the life and suffering of our Lord.  May you have a blessed Triduum and a joyful Easter!

Monday, January 25, 2016

Maker and Master Officially Released

Today, we are proud to announce the release of our first record, Maker and Master.  The record is available now for download at noisetrade.com/mullinkvrazel/maker-and-master.  You can download it for free, but we are asking everyone to prayerfully consider leaving a donation (tip).  100% of all the tips we receive for this album will be donated to the Ezekiel Home ministry of the Kiehl family mission in Peru, which you can read more about at frommetomissionary.wordpress.com or at the Family Missions Company website www.familymissionscompany.com.  Even if you aren't in a position to give a donation, we hope you'll help us spread the word about our record and the Kiehl family mission.  Most importantly, please keep us and the Kiehls in your prayers.  The video below explains a little more about the Kiehls and their missionGod bless!

 

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Holy Mary, Mother Of God

It's been a while since we've updated this site.  Both Michael and I have have had to juggle some new career developments over the past couple of years, and songwriting necessarily had to take a back seat for a bit.  We're happy to announce that we have some new material to share though, starting today with our first Marian hymn.

I'll have more to say on the inspiration for this piece in a second post, but for now here is a video that we put together with various Marian imagery and icons around the campus of our home parish, Immaculate Heart of Mary in Atlanta, GA.  Special thanks to Jen Stevens and Jeff Bush for providing the vocals on the solo verses and to Renee Payne, Julie Hiland, Patrick Donohue, and Bob and Jane Gillespie as well as Jen and Jeff for rounding out the choral parts.  Finally, we'd also like to thank Dorothy Cornwell and Erin Coughlin for adding the strings.


 

Please click below to view lyrics.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

All Creatures

Happy Easter!  He is risen! Alleluia!

In celebration of Easter this year, we are uploading a piano solo by Michael Mullink, All Creatures.  Based on the traditional hymn, All Creatures Of Our God And King, Michael composed these variations as part of the score for the video, "You Are Not Alone: Journeys Through Grief," posted below.  When we met to record the music for that video, he mentioned that he had come up with an arrangement for the hymn and asked if I would add guitar to the piece.  At that point, I had yet to hear his rendition of All Creatures but we've been winging things for years now so I was certainly game.  When it came time to record this piece that evening, I left the studio to join our very generous friend and producer, Bob Gillespie, in the engineering booth, thinking I would take a copy of the piano track home and come up with something on the guitar to add at a subsequent recording session.

Then, Michael began playing, and as you can hear for yourself via the music player on the right side of this web page, the music he made that night was inspired and beautiful.  Never losing its delicate tone (appropriate for a video on grief), he does a wonderful job of slowly building the piece, layering in his variations, adding subtle twists while never losing the feel and tone of the original hymn.  I remember not only being impressed by the musicianship on display (which, frankly, I always am whenever he plays) but also appreciative for the opportunity to sit back for a quiet moment and simply enjoy listening to a wonderful artist work.  Most of the time, I don't get such an opportunity around Michael because if he's playing, more than likely it usually means that I am supposed to be playing, too.

When Michael had finished, Bob and I looked at each other, and I think we both just shook our heads and grinned.  Michael joined us in the booth, and I told him there was no way I was going to add guitar to this piece.  It was perfect just as it was after that first take.  And I still agree with that assessment.  I hope you enjoy Michael's rendition of All Creatures, and I hope you have a happy and blessed Easter season.

"All creatures of our God and King,
Lift up your voice and with us sing!
Oh, praise Him!  Alleluia"

What a wonderful hymn for this Easter season!  God bless!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Story behind the video "You Are Not Alone"

For the past year and a half, I have been involved in a project of group learning with other hospice chaplains and bereavement ministers here in Atlanta.  We formed a cohort through a program offered by Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia, who encouraged us to engage in acts of Study, Sabbath, and Service.  This video is our service project which we hope to make available to bereaved people in our respective communities and on the websites of the various hospice companies in which we are employed.

Michael and I chose to post it here in case some of you may know of someone who might benefit from the message of hope and comfort it contains.  The video also holds some of our original music.  It begins with a verse of a song, "Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep" that we hope to post in its entirety soon.  Also you will hear portions of some piano strains I recorded last fall to the tune of what is likely a familiar hymn to many, "All Creatures of Our God and King".  Finally, we included a recording of "Let Nothing Trouble You" that we posted a couple of months back.

This was a remarkable opportunity for all of us, inasmuch as a palpable sense of God's grace seemed to infuse each of us along the various stages of this shared endeavor. When I learned on a Friday that our filmmaker was unexpectedly available that weekend, we managed to assemble everyone we needed to begin filming the interviews on the same day as our fall Memorial service for my hospice company, Compassionate Care.  It was CCH who coincidentally had provided in-home hospice care for the husbands of the three women who shared the joys and sorrows of their hospice experience with us.  The audio recording sessions took place on two evenings in November and, again, God opened the hearts of so many talented people to give their time and inestimable talents.  In the first few months of this year, with the help of our filmmaker, Evan McIntosh we managed to get everything edited and fashioned into the work you are now able to view here as well as on YouTube.  We remain grateful for God's gift of inspiration, faithfulness and healing love which continues to hold us fast.

Please help us spread our words and songs of faith to all who have hearts that grieve.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

You Are Not Alone: Journeys Through Grief

Today, we're posting a video recently produced by Michael Mullink and some of his fellow hospice chaplains for those dealing with grief over the loss of a loved one.  We're sharing it through this blog and other web outlets like Facebook and YouTube in the hopes that it may find those for whom it could be of some use.  God bless!

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Let Nothing Trouble You

This song literally "dawned" on me on the morning of March 24, 2012.  I had been very concerned for my sister Donna's family back home in Illinois because my brother-in-law was receiving his first chemo treatments for metastatic lung cancer.  Due to the extreme stress on everyone, my niece Jenny was also hospitalized.  It had been a fitful night's sleep for me as I prayed for my loved ones from whom I felt so far away.  I arose before dawn and was doing some last minute research in the Catechism of the Catholic Church for a talk that Michael Vrazel and I were to give later that morning to the people who would embrace the Catholic faith at the Easter Vigil in two weeks.  The refrain seemed to jump off the page at me.  You may be familiar with these words that are taken from a quote by St. Teresa of Avila, a Doctor of the Church and mystic from the 16th century.  The descant bears similar words of comfort, but are even more ancient inasmuch as they paraphrase the Lord's final discourse on the night of the Last Supper as recorded in John 14.  

The verses came a little later, during Father's Day weekend, while on retreat in Dublin, Georgia at Green Bough with my fellow chaplain, Elaine Hoffman.  They are adapted from words I was meditating on from Parker Palmer's book, Let Your Life Speak, that my support group of hospice chaplains had been reading for discussions we would hold later in the summer.  I heard them as something I really needed to remember, but also as something I wanted to say to my niece, Jenny.  

We have so many to thank for this recording, starting with our sound engineer, fellow IHM musician, Bob Gillespie and his wife Jane, who sings on the recording.  Also recorded are my fellow hospice colleagues, Lesley Brogan and Elaine Hoffman.  Fellow IHM choir members Nimalie Stone, Julie Hiland, and Sarah Bolling can likewise be heard adding their beautiful voices.  We were directed by Jeff Bush, who is singing here along with Michael Vrazel and me.  The clarinet is beautifully played by another parish musician, IHM School's music teacher, Melissa Mecadon who is a music minister at our 11:30 Mass along with Jeff and Michael and me.  We are also grateful for Paul Tate's musicianship as he offered tremendous encouragement in the writing of this piece.  He supplied the instrumental part Melissa is playing and at his urging, we went on to write additional verses to make this piece adaptable to the seasons of Lent, for the Sacraments of Reconciliation and the Anointing of the Sick and at Masses of Christian Burial, though you will not hear the additional verses in this recording.

Click below for lyrics.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Come Home, My Love

In my hospice work, I share the wonderment of family members at the dying process and its surprises.  One familiar experience of the dying seems to be that loved ones who have already "gone on" tend to appear at their bedside to encourage them or perhaps to accompany the dying along their way.  In fact, I have had hospice patients try to introduce me to their visitors who remain hidden from my sight. By and large, these appearances seem to calm and delight the dying patient as the look on their face reveals a mystical serenity that seems to slow the pace of their breathing, even as they seem to "look through" their earth-bound family members and caregivers who likewise stand at their bedside.

Following the writing of "I've Gone Away," which was meant as a folk anthem to give voice to the comfort and hope that a dead young man sings to ease the grief of his intended bride, I began a process of writing lyrics for the actual dying process.  "Come Home, My Love" is the first such piece.  The tune may be familiar to you. It is adapted from a folk melody sung in the Appalachians, a variant of the earlier tune, Barbara Allen.  Now, you might hear it as the voice of Jesus, calling his disciple to enter at last into their rest.  Or, perhaps it could be heard as the song of a long dead parent or spouse who returns at the end of life to sing peace into the heart of their beloved.  

Our thanks goes again to Jeff Bush who sings with us in this death bed hymn that affirms our belief in the life that awaits us in God's keeping.

Click below to view the lyrics.