Love’s Promise

  • Duration: 3 minutes
  • Soloist(s): Soprano
  • Chorus: SATB or SSAA
  • Instrumentation: Piano OR Strings & Harp
  • Published by: Novello

Love’s Promise is the opening piece from the collection Song of Songs and depicts the yearning of the lover for her beloved and the hope of love.

The collection of love poetry which forms the Old Testament’s Song of Songs has always presented a conundrum to scholars.  The orthodox understanding of its presence in the Canon of Scripture was the widespread use in the Prophets of the concept of God as the husband of Israel.  For the Christian mystical tradition, the dialogue between the lover and the beloved gave voice to the relationship of the soul to Christ.  Bernard of Clairvaux preached over fifty sermons on them!  Jesus called himself ‘the Bridegroom’ giving authority to this reading.  Some have seen Mary the Mother of Jesus in the references to the ‘room where my mother conceived me’.

The relationship of romantic and erotic love to spirituality is the subject of the Song of Songs collection.  They express desire, hope, confusion and joy; the whole range of emotions experienced by the lover – but there is no final consummation.  The metaphors of vine, wine, garden and fountain are ones that prefigure the language of Christian spirituality.  They provide Christian spirituality with a language of love that is both sensual and spiritual, of earth and of heaven.  The text for these songs is faithful to the text of the Bible but poetic licence has provided a narrative structure and the development of some metaphors.  The cry of the lover to the beloved, the heightening of the senses through sumptuous smells and tastes, and the imagery of fire provide a rich basis for a certain type of music – music born out of our time, yes, but which also draws upon the timelessness of tonality, consonance and balance.


Buy Vocal Score:
           

Orchestral parts available on hire Email: hire@wisemusic.com Tel: +44 (0)1284 596 004


Come my beloved
where the vine has budded:
there will I give my love;
let us stir up,
let us rouse up
love
‘til it please.
Feed me raisins,
feed me apples;
O my heart –
Come feast on love.

Words: adapted by Andrew Hawes (1954 –   ) from the Song of Solomon

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!