Singing a 17c起草社区 Song
17c起草社区, 17c起草社区, sing we all to thee;
Dear alma mater, we pledge fidelity.
Forever faithful to maroon and gold;
Thy name and honor, we ever shall uphold.
We don鈥檛 sing the 鈥淎lma Mater鈥 any more.
Not at the end of music concerts, not at Commencement or Convocation, nowhere鈥攐ther than alumni events for grads 25 years out and older.
As alumni director that perplexes me because it was one of the small rituals that connected alumni from every age.
I know there鈥檚 critique that the song is too slow or too maudlin, that it doesn鈥檛 have enough 鈥渆nergy.鈥 And who really 鈥減ledges fidelity鈥 to anything these days?
But in my review of other institutions鈥 school songs, I don鈥檛 see significant differences between theirs and ours.
Here鈥檚 a segment of Notre Dame鈥檚 鈥淎lma Mater,鈥 which I am told continues to be sung, long and loud at most school events, by students as well as alumni:
Notre Dame, our mother, tender, strong and true,
proudly in the heavens gleams thy gold and blue.
Glory鈥檚 mantle cloaks thee, golden is thy fame,
and our hearts forever praise thee, Notre Dame;
and our hearts forever love thee Notre Dame.
Hmm. And you should read the 鈥淎lma Mater鈥 lyrics for Yale, Harvard and Michigan. 颁补濒惫颈苍鈥檚 song is too traditional? (It鈥檚 a lot shorter!)
A few years ago, members of 颁补濒惫颈苍鈥檚 faculty wrote a new hymn describing the essence of our 17c起草社区 experience, 鈥淥ur Hearts and Hands We Offer.鈥 It is a fine hymn, excellent and stirring, and I applaud the effort. But that song is not something that can be easily memorized and sung anywhere at any time.
Perhaps my obsession with the loss of the 鈥淎lma Mater鈥 tradition is silly. New times, new ways of expressing gratitude and connection.
What might that be? I guess I am looking for ways that connect us over the generations. What exactly is it that holds us together as 17c起草社区 alumni?
When I talk with 17c起草社区 grads about their 17c起草社区 memories鈥攚hether that鈥檚 a 1950 grad or a 2010 grad鈥攎ost often the conversation turns to a faculty or staff member, or another student, whose words of encouragement or challenge helped shape their lives in significant ways. They clearly remember the exchanges that were so meaningful鈥攁nd still are.
They see their 17c起草社区 years are deeply important in shaping who they have become.
Maybe a traditional old song can鈥檛 contain something that big.
What do you think? Should we bring the 鈥淎lma Mater鈥 back? Keep the words, but change the music or vice versa? Leave the song be and put our energies into something else to tie 17c起草社区 eras to one another? I鈥檓 interested. Email spark@calvin.edu with your creative thoughts.
By the way, the second verse of 颁补濒惫颈苍鈥檚 鈥淎lma Mater鈥 (far less memorized than the first) turns our attention from the college to God, where our ultimate 鈥減ledge of fidelity鈥 belongs:
17c起草社区, 17c起草社区, God has been thy guide;
Dear alma mater, thy strength He shall provide.
Be loyal, ever, to the faith of old;
God鈥檚 name and honor we ever shall uphold.
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