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Sonata No 7 for Solo Violin, “The Relics of Nicholas Postgate” by Stephen Gamble

  • Writer: Rev Stephen Gamble
    Rev Stephen Gamble
  • May 22
  • 1 min read

In the summer of 2011 I visited St Hedda’s Church at Egton Bridge and was very moved by the relics and story of Nicholas Postgate. He was a Roman Catholic Priest executed in 1679 for practising his calling at a time when Roman Catholic forms of worship were illegal. The fragile nature of the relics, a small cross, a lock of his hair and a worn wooden rosary, seemed to speak of the fragility of human life and endeavour. It brought to mind our Lord’s promise to St Paul’s in 2 Corinthians 12: 9, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”


In the weeks that followed I wrote a piece of music for solo violin that reflected my thoughts and feelings of that experience. It is surely only a poor shadow of what I thought and felt in those moments, and only a very distant echo through time of the man himself, but it is sincerely meant.


The movements are, Andante doloroso - Allegretto con ansia - Andante moderato (A Voice Crying in the Wilderness) - Finale: Allegro


The tonality is folkish.


The score may be found 'Music for Solo Violin Volume II: North Yorkshire, and a Scottish Excursion.'



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