Person Results

Text Identifier:"^thou_gracious_power_whose_mercy_lends$"
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 11 - 16 of 16Results Per Page: 102050

Samuel Webbe

1740 - 1816 Person Name: S. Webbe Composer of "MELCOMB" in The Church Hymnary Samuel Webbe (the elder; b. London, England, 1740; d. London, 1816) Webbe's father died soon after Samuel was born without providing financial security for the family. Thus Webbe received little education and was apprenticed to a cabinet­maker at the age of eleven. However, he was determined to study and taught himself Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, German, and Italian while working on his apprentice­ship. He also worked as a music copyist and received musical training from Carl Barbant, organist at the Bavarian Embassy. Restricted at this time in England, Roman Catholic worship was freely permitted in the foreign embassies. Because Webbe was Roman Catholic, he became organist at the Portuguese Chapel and later at the Sardinian and Spanish chapels in their respective embassies. He wrote much music for Roman Catholic services and composed hymn tunes, motets, and madrigals. Webbe is considered an outstanding composer of glees and catches, as is evident in his nine published collections of these smaller choral works. He also published A Collection of Sacred Music (c. 1790), A Collection of Masses for Small Choirs (1792), and, with his son Samuel (the younger), Antiphons in Six Books of Anthems (1818). Bert Polman

H. A. Harding

1855 - 1930 Composer of "FOEL FRAS" in The New Baptist Praise Book

Thomas B. Southgate

1814 - 1868 Composer of "BROOKFIELD" in The Evangelical Hymnal Southgate, Thomas Bishop, born at Hornsey, Middlesex, June 8, 1814; educated in the school of the Chapel Royal, where he was a chorister; studied harmony under Thomas Attwood and Sir John Goss, and the organ under Samuel Wesley; organist of Hornsey Church from 1834 to 1853, and of St Anne's, Highgate Rise, London, from the latter year until his death, which occured at Highgate, November 3, 1868. EVENSONG, No. 320 F.C.H., was published in sheet form in 1858, set to the words "God that madest earth and heaven." --James Love, Scottish Church Music: Its Composers and Sources (1891)

Herbert Stanley Oakeley

1830 - 1903 Person Name: Sir Herbert S. Oakeley Composer of "ABENDS" in The Fellowship Hymn Book

Johann Heinrich Egli

1742 - 1810 Person Name: Johann H. Egli Composer of "ES KAM DIE GNADENVOLLE" in The Mennonite Hymnary, published by the Board of Publication of the General Conference of the Mennonite Church of North America

S. H. Gregory

1869 - 1950 Person Name: S. H. Gregory, 1859-1950 Composer of "WENDELL" in The Methodist Hymn-Book with Tunes

Pages


Export as CSV
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.