CREDO (Stainer)

CREDO (Stainer)

Composer: John Stainer (1875)
Published in 30 hymnals


Printable scores: PDF, MusicXML
Audio files: MIDI, Recording

Composer: John Stainer

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Tune Information

Title: CREDO (Stainer)
Composer: John Stainer (1875)
Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8
Incipit: 55551 71543 57654
Key: c minor
Copyright: Public Domain

Notes

John Stainer (b. Southwark, London, England, 1840; d. Verona, Italy, 1901) composed CREDO for the text "We Saw Thee Not When Thou Didst Come"; the tune was published in Hymns Ancient and Modern (1875). CREDO, like some other Victorian tunes, depends as much on its harmonization as on its melody for effectiveness. But the bold gestures of the tune's final line also give it distinction. Part singing is essential. Pause for a breath at the end of the first musical phrase. If a more familiar tune is needed for this psalm (for example, at a wedding), consider using MELITA (425).

An influential composer and music scholar in the Victorian era, Stainer grew up in a musical environment. As a young boy he took organ lessons from his father on their small home chamber organ, and he became a chorister at St. Paul Cathedral in 1849. In 1856 Frederick Ousely, professor of music at Oxford, visited St. Paul's and heard the young Stainer improvising at the organ. Ousely promptly offered him employment as the organist of the College of St. Michael at Tenbury.

One of England's leading musicians, Stainer also held organist positions at Magdalen College (1860-1872), University College (1861-1872), St. Paul's Cathedral (1872-1888), and the National Training School of Music, now the Royal College of Music (1875-1888). He founded the Oxford Philharmonic Society and conducted its first concert in 1866. His most famous cantata, The Crucifixion (1887), was followed in 1888 by knighthood and honorary degrees from Durham and Oxford.

Much of Stainer's church music was composed for St. Paul Cathedral, including many anthems, carols, and cantatas. He was also a prominent musicologist-his publications include A Theory of Harmony (1871), Music of the Bible (1879), and a study of Dufay. He composed some one hundred and fifty hymn tunes, published collectively as Hymn Tunes (1901). He also served as editor of the Church Hymnary (1888) and coeditor of the well-known Christmas Carols (1871) and The Cathedral Prayer Book with Music (1891).

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook, 1988

Timeline

Arrangements

Harmonizations, Introductions, Descants, Intonations

  • 150 Last Verse Harmonies: For Use with the Hymn Books of the Baptist, Methodist, United Reformed and Other Free Churches
    Composer/Editor June Nixon
    Published By: Kevin Mayhew Ltd. (2007) pp. 34

Instances

Instances (1 - 5 of 5)

Hymns and Psalms #629a

Page Scan

Hymns for Today's Church (2nd ed.) #121

Text InfoTune InfoScoreAudio

Psalter Hymnal (Gray) #127

Singing the Faith #600

Audio

Small Church Music #1937

Include 25 pre-1979 instances
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