The “Divine Office” or “Liturgy of the Hours” is a set of short services observed 8 times a day. Celebration of the Divine Office began during the Medieval Period and is still observed today in monasteries throughout the world. The services take place approximately every three hours: Matins (2:00 am), Lauds (5:00 am), Prime (dawn), Terce (9:00 am), Sext (noon), None (3:00 pm), Vespers (6:00 pm or dusk), Compline (8:00 pm or just before bed). Structure varies between services, but generally they consist of psalms, prayers, antiphons, responses, canticles and readings.
The Divine Office: A Suite for Handbells is an original, programmatic composition designed to illustrate both the 8 services in the Breviary, and scenes from medieval life. This extended, 21st Century work has 6 compatible, independent movements; one for each of the canonical hours. These movements may be performed as separate pieces. The hours of terce, sext and none are combined into Pilgrimage, the 4th movement. Originally it was commissioned for 4 octaves of Petit and Fritsen handbells (alternate bells), but cue notes have been added to adapt it to regular handbells. Click on the titles below for more info on the individual movements.
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