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Howard Charles Adie Gaunt

1902 - 1983 Person Name: Henry Charles Adie Gaunt, 1902-1983 Author of "Dear Lord, to you again" in Complete Anglican Hymns Old and New

Geoff Weaver

b. 1943 Person Name: Geoff Weaver, b. 1943 Arranger of "[All who are thirsty, come to the Lord]" in The Irish Presbyterian Hymnbook

Alan Gaunt

1935 - 2023 Person Name: Alan Gaunt (b. 1935) Translator of "Here proclaim the glorious mystery" in Ancient and Modern

Adam M. L. Tice

b. 1979 Person Name: Adam. M. L. Tice, b. 1979 Author of "Jesus Promises Communion" in Worship (4th ed.)

Kevin Keil

b. 1965 Composer of "MATTHEWSONG" in Breaking Bread (Vol. 39)

Sydney H. Nicholson

1875 - 1947 Person Name: Sydney Hugo Nicholson (1875-1947) Arranger of "GRAFTON (TANTUM ERGO SACRAMENTUM)" in Ancient and Modern Sydney H. Nicholson, (b. St. Marylebone, London, England, 1875; d. Ashford, Kent, England, 1947) was an organist and church music educator who greatly influenced English hymnody. Educated at Oxford's New College, the Royal College of Music in London, and in Frankfurt, Germany, he became organist at several famous cathedrals, including Westminster Abbey (1919-1928). Nicholson founded and administered the School of English Church Music at Chislehurst in 1927; this important institution, with branches throughout the English-speaking world, was renamed the Royal School of Church Music in 1945. Located in Canterbury after World War II, its headquarters were moved to Addington Palace, Croydon, in 1954. Nicholson was music adviser for the 1916 Supplement of Hymns Ancient and Modern and prepared the way for its 1950 edition. He wrote Church Music: a Practical Handbook (1920) and Quires and Places Where They Sing (1932) and composed operettas, anthems, and hymn tunes. In 1938 he was knighted for his contributions to church music. Bert Polman

Melva Treffinger Graham

b. 1947 Person Name: Melva Treffinger Graham (1947-) Composer (refrain trumpet descant) of "WIR PFLÜGEN" in Common Praise (1998)

Mary Nelson Keithahn

b. 1934 Author of "Before the Dawn Had Broken" in Faith That Lets Us Sing Mary Nelson Keithahn, a retired United Church of Christ ordained pastor and church educator, has been a curriculum writer-editor, journalist, and lyricist for musical dramas and anthems. She still works out of her home in Rapid City, South Dakota, as a free-lance writer. In 2016 she published Elfie: Adventures on the Midwest Frontier, a chapter book for children, and Embracing the Light: Reflectioins on God’s Holy Word, a collection of meditations for individual or small group use. Augsburg Fortress also published Sing the Stories of God’s NEW People, the third in a trilogy of Bible story-based collections of songs for young children, written with her longtime colleague, John D. Horman. The two have written over a hundred hymns together, some of which are included in these hymnals and supplements: Community of Christ Sings, God’s Mission, God’s Song, Hymns of Heritage and Hope, Lift Up Your Hearts, Sing Justice! Do Justice, Sing the Faith, Singing Our Savior’s Story, Singing the New Testament, The Faith We Sing, Upper Room Worshipbook, Voices Found, Voices United, and Worship and Song. They have also published four collections of their hymns: Come Away with Me and Time Now to Gather (Abingdon, 1998), The Song Lingers On (Zimbel, 2003), and Faith That Lets Us Sing (Wayne Leupold Editions, 2017). Mary is a Life Member and former board member of Choristers Guild and a Life Member of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada. She is also a member of ASCAP. In 2006 she received a Distinguished Achievement Award from her alma mater, Carleton College in Northfield, MN, in recognition of her work in composing text for religious music. Mary was married to the Rev. Richard K. Keithahn, a U.C.C. pastor, and widowed in 1986. She has three children, eight grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. --mnk

Christian Friedrich Witt

1660 - 1717 Person Name: Christian F. Witt Composer of "STUTTGART" in Baptist Hymnal 1991 Christian F. Witt (b. Altenburg, Germany, d. 1660; d. Altenburg, 1716) was an editor and compiler of Psalmodia Sacra (1715); about 100 (of the 774) tunes in that collection are considered to be composed by him, including STUTTGART, which was set to the text "Sollt' es gleich." Witt was chamber organist and later Kapellmeister at the Gotha court. He composed vocal and instrumental music, including some sixty-five cantatas. Bert Polman

Sylvanus Billings Pond

1792 - 1871 Composer of "ARMENIA" in The Cyber Hymnal

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