This page is definitely still under construction – right now it's just a hodgepodge of me trying all kinds of links and possibilities. I will have music posts on my blog page, but I plan to have an archive of downloadable audio files, pdfs of music, and videos here. If you came to this site looking for church music I've written, I highly recommend Linda Hansen's website and labor of love, "Church of God Music". (Click here for the link.) She has assembled a pretty impressive collection of downloadable music from various Church of God musicians.

Meanwhile, you can feel free to roam around here, but don't judge me by the lack of formatting and organization!


Kind of an interesting old Scottish tune and Jacobite song, "Sir John Fenwick's The Flower Among Them All". Which is often misunderstood to mean it was written by Mr. Fenwick, when really it means he IS the flower. I just like it. Those of you who are familiar with my piece "The Songs Of Ascents" might recognize the tune on which I based Psalm 128. This version was performed in 1991 with my good Scotsman friend Hal Henderson on guitar, Dave Miller on the mandolin, and myself on harp.


A song I wrote for Thea in 1994. It really happened this way back in 1975.


I'm experimenting with uploading/linking to various types of media. This is a video of a 50-minute choral work I wrote called "The Songs Of Ascents", performed in Gamble Auditorium at Baldwin Wallace Conservatory by the BW Singers. I cannot overstate how much I enjoyed working with Marc and Michelle and the singers. It might not be a note-perfect performance – it is a far more difficult piece than I knew – but they definitely captured the spirit of it, and I treasure this performance.

A choral setting of Psalms 120 through 134, plus a Prelude. Composed by Mark Weir Graham, directed by Marc Weagraff, piano by Michelle Makhlouf, soprano solo by Cynthia O'Connell. Performed April 15, 2018.

Then I wanted to experiment with downloadable sheet music. This is a song written for United Church of God's Women's Weekends. It has been sung at several events.

Click here to download "Daughters In The Lord" group singing version.


I have written a number of hymns for our church over the years, including this version of Psalm 119. My friend Geoff Robertson in Brisbane sent me this stunning version he recorded of the song, with a pianist friend in Australia and, this being 2018, a fantastic Scottish violinist now working in Paris. Geoff also is the photographer. Anyway, I was so touched and impressed by this rendition that it led to Thea and me flying across the ocean to spend time with Geoff and Roxanne and their daughters – and a few hundred other church people! It was an unforgettable trip.


And while we're at it, I might as well include THIS version of the same song, filmed for the opening night of the fall holy days, the Feast of Tabernacles. Except it was spring in Australia. Geoff and an American team put this video together. I know the children involved, and hearing this for the first time while sitting with the Robertsons (they managed to surprise me), I was brought to tears by its beauty. I tend to keep my spiritual life private, but this is such a beautiful introduction to what the Feast of Tabernacles means that I'm happy to share it with the world.

And that should do it for now.