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Tune Identifier:trees_of_the_field_dauermann
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Stuart Dauermann

b. 1944 Author of "The Trees of the Field" in Worship in Song

Bertus Frederick Polman

1945 - 2013 Person Name: Bert Polman Author (st. 2) of "The Trees of the Field" in Songs for Life Bert Frederick Polman (b. Rozenburg, Zuid Holland, the Netherlands, 1945; d. Grand Rapids, Michigan, July 1, 2013) was chair of the Music Department at Calvin College and senior research fellow for the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship. Dr. Bert studied at Dordt College (BA 1968), the University of Minnesota (MA 1969, PhD in musicology 1981), and the Institute for Christian Studies. Dr. Bert was a longtime is professor of music at Redeemer College in Ancaster, Ontario, and organist at Bethel Christian Reformed Church, Waterdown, Ontario. His teaching covered a wide range of courses in music theory, music history, music literature, and worship, and Canadian Native studies. His research specialty was Christian hymnody. He was also an organist, a frequent workshop leader at music and worship conferences, and contributor to journals such as The Hymn and Reformed Worship. Dr. Bert was co-editor of the Psalter Hymnal Handbook (1989), and served on the committees that prepared Songs for Life (1994) and Sing! A New Creation (2001), both published by CRC Publications. Emily Brink

Steffi Karen Rubin

b. 1950 Person Name: Steffi Geiser Rubin Author of "The Trees of the Field" in Worship in Song

Patrick Wedd

1948 - 2019 Person Name: Patrick Wedd, 1948- Harmonizer of "THE TRESS OF THE FIELD" in Common Praise (1998) Patrick Wedd was an organist and choral conductor. He was born in Simcoe, Ontario. By the age of twelve he was organist and choir director in his church. He studied at the University of Toronto and U.B.C. He was music director at Vancouver's Christ Church Cathedral. In 1986 he moved to Montreal and served at Church os Saint Andrew and Saint Paul from 1986-1992, at the Church of St. John the Evangelist from 1992-1996, and at Christ Church Cathedral from 1996 to 2018. He also directed the Tudor Singers and Musica Orbium, a semi-professional choir he founded. Dianne Shapiro, from www.cbc.ca article accessed 5/24/2019

Roland Fudge

b. 1947 Person Name: Roland T. Fudge (b. 1947) Arranger of "[You shall go out with joy and be led forth with peace]" in Church Hymnary (4th ed.)

Carmelia de la Paz

Translator of "Con Gozo y Alegría" in Himnos de Vida y Luz

Anne Harrison

b. 1954 Person Name: Anne Harrison (b. 1954) Arranger of "[You shall go out with joy]" in Ancient and Modern

Paul Bateman

b. 1954 Person Name: Paul Batemen, 1954- Arranger of "TREES OF THE FIELD" in Together in Song Paul Bateman studied piano at the Guildhall School of Music. He also studied singing, organ and cello. He has worked as a free lance pianist, accompanist, chamber musician and conductor. He has composed mostly church music and hymns and has made many other arrangements. Dianne Shapiro, from Paul Bateman's website (www.paul-bateman.com accessed 7/1/2018)

Martin Clarke

b. 1982 Person Name: Martin V. Clarke, b. 1982 Arranger of "[You shall go out with joy and be led forth with peace]" in Singing the Faith

Leland Bryant Ross

b. 1954 Person Name: Ros' Haruo Translator of "Eliros vi kun ĝoj'" in TTT-Himnaro Cigneta American Baptist layman. Amateur hymnologist and polyglot. Translator of many hymns into, and author of a few in, Esperanto, as well as some hymns in English. 13 texts (incl. 3 original) in Adoru, plus two in Espero Katolika's supplement. Edited the largest online Esperanto hymnal, TTT-Himnaro Cigneta, now accessible via the Wayback Machine at archive.org, (https://web.archive.org/web/20091021113553/http://geocities.com/cigneto/pretaj.html) as well as in large part here on Hymnary.org. Lives near Seattle.

Anthony F. Carver

b. 1947 Person Name: Anthony Frederick Carver (b. 1947) Arranger of "[You shall go out with joy]" in Ancient and Modern

Albrecht Kronenberger

b. 1940 Translator of "Eliros vi kun ĝoj'" in TTT-Himnaro Cigneta Albrecht Kronenberger, born January 21, 1940, in Würzburg, Germany, was one of the three editors of ADORU - Ekumena Diserva Libro. As a youth, lived in Pirmasens and Germersheim; studied philosophy and Catholic theology in Eichstätt (Bavaria), Frankfurt (Hesse), and Speyer, where he was ordained a priest in 1966. After serving as vicar in Frankenthal and Bellheim, he worked from 1969 to 2002 as a Gymnasium (secondary school) teacher of religion in Neustadt an der Weinstraße, where he has remained in his retirement. Not long after learning Esperanto in the late 1980s, he began to be active in teaching Esperanto in his school and in celebrating Esperanto-language masses in connection with Esperanto conventions and in the cathedral of Speyer (every other month since 1991). In 1991 he also cofounded the Working Union of IKUE in the Speyer diocese, which was officially acknowledged and approved by the bishop. Albrecht Kronenberger edited the 1,472-page ADORU together with Adolf Burkhardt and Bernhard Eichkorn. He typeset all its texts and music on his computer, as well as writing many texts and some melodies himself. The three editors were awarded the FAME Prize (a cultural prize of the city of Aalen and of the FAME Foundation) in 2002. In the first few years of the third millennium, Kronenberger edited the new edition of the Esperanto Bible, which appeared in 2006. Beginning in 2007, he put all of the hymns of the Latin Breviary, many of them his own translations, into Vikifonto (the Esperanto version of WikiSource). He initiated and arranged "Kantoj post ADORU", a hymnal supplement published as a special issue (No. 1-3/2009) of Espero Katolika. Since 2009, in collaboration with Marius Gibbels, he has been working on a project (Projekt Deutsch-Esperanto) that aims to produce a truly complete online German-Esperanto dictionary. The German-language church songbook "Gotteslob" contains one of Albrecht Kronenberger's compositions, a Gloria (#455). (main source: Esperanto Wikipedia)

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