JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. This content downloaded from 128.235.251.160 on Mon, 30 Mar 2015 00:05:15 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions I dz2 call upon the Lord. Anthem for foursoices. Composed by T. Mee Pattison.THIS is written with admirable purity. It is less remarkable for interest. There is little doubtthat a musician, who has so well mastered technicalities as the anthem evinces of its author, may soon gain fluency of thought if he persevere in the practice of writing * while the effect is so agreeable on an audience, and so saiutary on a choir, of grammatical correctness, that any deficiency of excitement in the character of this rnusic will be more than made up for by its unpretensive soundness. By all means go on Mr.Pattison, and fulfil our hope of still more attractive tLings from your hand. The piece is brief ill estent, contains a repeat of its first strain which little lengthens its efect, is easy of esecution, and is on all these counts, widely available.Ghant to U57 Lor2, we beseech Thee. Short full Anthem for four voices. Composed by J. iBarnby WE have not met with a more charming piece than the present, from the hand of its productinre author. The ten bar rhythm of its opening strain is rendered symmetrical by its repetition, and the unusuality of this stamps the piece with a distinctive ch&racter, which at once arrests and lastingly holds the attention. " Short " is one of its defining terms, and an obviously true one, for the entire length reaches but to three pages; and this shortness fits it for many places and occasions whence greater extent with equal merit might exclude it. Brevity is the soul of wit, and often also the body of es:pediency-the piece before us esemplifies the virtue of brevity both in its spiritual and corporeal conditions. Let no oue misprize this quality of conciseness. sc I have not time to write a short letter,a' says the always felicitous word-measurer, Charles Lamb, apologetically for inditing a long one. An exterlded composition in words or in notes, admits of dull passages as relief to more salient points * but a compact work requires that each word or every note be of indispensable interest in itself and necessity to the whole. The anthem is less chromatic than are some of Mr. Bareby's pieces, and it gains by the loss of sharps alld naturals, for its purpose of devotional expression and in e2zecutive facility. It is set to the Collect for the ninth Sunday after Trinity-it beautifully embodies the meek tenour of the test and it is available for large choirs or for small, and desirabie for any.PaqSadzse and the Pert. The words written and adapted from Moore's " Lalla Rookh," by X. W. Duleken, Ph.D., the music composed for solo voices, chorus, and...