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John Alcock

1715 - 1806 Person Name: John Alcock, 1715-1806 Hymnal Number: 3a Composer of "[O be joyful in the Lord all ye lands]" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.) John Alcock, doctor of music, was born in London, April 11, 1715; he composed songs, church music, glees, anthems, instrumental music, chantes, etc., and obtained the prize at the Catch Club; died at Lichfield, 1806, aged 91. A Dictionary of Musical Information by John W. Moore, Boston: Oliver, Ditson & Company, 1876

John Currie

1934 - 2020 Hymnal Number: 21 Composer of "[O come let us sing unto the Lord]" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.)

Edmund Spenser

1552 - 1599 Person Name: Edmund Spenser, c. 1552-99 Hymnal Number: 44 Author of "Most glorious Lord of life, that on this day" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.) Spenser, Edmund (born 1552; died 1599), has a right to his place in this work extrinsically and intrinsically. Extrinsically his odes, entitled by himself Fowre Hymnes, give us a connecting link with Chaucer; and intrinsically they are of "the brave translunary things" that ought long since to have introduced much in them to the Church's Hymnology. Spenser in the outset acknowledged Chaucer for his "dere maister;" and throughout there are echoes and re-echoes of him. Specifically in relation to the Foure Hymn, the Compleynt of Pite must have been carried by the youthful Spenser to Hurstwood and the Pendle district, or was found in one or other of the contemporary oultured Spenser households there. The Compleyn is of "Love," as is Spenser's first of the immortal four "in honour of Love." Like Chaucer's, the metre of the new Hymnes is rhyme-royal; and the meditative reader of the elder and later poets will catch notes and images common to both. Nor is it mere verbal resemblances that we come upon. The thought and emotion flow in the same channels… Turning to the Hymnes themselves, the student-reader will be rewarded if he consult Professor F. T. Palgrave's inestimable Essay on the "Minor Poems of Spenser." I can only cull two bits on the two greatest of the Hymnes. Of “Love":— "The love painted here is at once so idealized and so general—the human and the personal aspect of passion so faintly present—that we feel as though this were tome splendid procession unwinding itself before us in progress to the Capitol, rather than a hymn sung in the inmost shrine of Eros. What we hear is far lets the music of Love, than Love set to lovely music: a stream of gorgeous beauty, in which the chivalry of the Middle Ages blends audibly with the mythology of the Renaissance." Then of "Heavenly Love:"— "Nowhere, I think, has Spenser written, in his larger pieces at least, with more uniformly equable dignity, united with more serene melody, than here; and great is the gain in reasonableness and charm to the celestial vision and the pictures from the Gospel story which he presents, from the absence of that Platonic colouring—so far as Platonism it is—which tinges the earlier companion Ode. Spenser, in fact, now writes from the fulness of his faith ; and the poem has hence a reality which the most skilful art alone, in the most skilful hands, let the artist strive as he will, must ever fail to compass." [Rev. A. B. Grosart, D.D., LL.D] --Excerpts from John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ================= Spenser, Edmund, p. 1072, ii. His poem, “Most glorious Lord of life, that on this day " (Sunday), is Sonnet lxviii. in his Amoretti and Epithalamion, 1595 (not paged), and is in his Works, ed. K. Morris, 1871, p. 583. In The English Hymnal, 1906. [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Edith F. B. MacAlister

1875 - 1950 Person Name: Edith Florence Boyle Macalister, 1873-1950 Hymnal Number: 16 Author of "Lord Jesus, be thou with us now" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.)

Thomas Wilson

b. 1926 Hymnal Number: 13 Composer of "RUTHERGLEN" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.)

Kenneth Leighton

1929 - 1988 Hymnal Number: 44 Composer of "DUNOON" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.) Kenneth Leighton; b. Wakefield, October 2, 1929, d. Edinburgh, August 24, 1988, was born in Wakefield, Yorkshire; 1951 grad. of Queen’s College, BMUS; in 1960, awarded Doctorate of Music, Univ. of Oxford; in his career he held various univ. professorships; in 1970, appointed Reid Professor of Music at the Univ. of Edinburgh, which he held until his death in 1988; one of the distinguished British post-war composers; over 100 compositions are published

Alfred E. Alston

1862 - 1927 Person Name: Alfred Edward Alston, 1862-1927 Hymnal Number: 31 Translator of "Father most holy, merciful and loving" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.) Alston, Alfred Edward, son of E. G. Alston, Queen's Advocate at Sierra Leone, born in 1862, and educated at St. Paul's School and Gloucester Theo. Coll. D. 1886; P. 1887; Curate of St. Mark's, Gloucester, 1886-7; and since 1887 Rector of Framingham-Earl, with Bixley. In 1904 the following Carols by Mr. Alston, with Tunes by Robin H. Legge, were included in the Clumber Hymnal:— 1. Cometh the day when the gloom fled away. [Purification B. V. M.] Written in 1894, and published by Novello & Co. the same year in Twelve New Christmas Carols, by A. E. Alston and R. H. Legge. 2. Cometh the night when the Lord of light. [Christmas Eve.] Written in 1890, and published in Novello's Christmas Carols, No. 237. 3. Herod the king in his palace sate. [Epiphany.] Written in 1890, and published as No. 246 of Novello's Christmas Carols. 4. Praise we now the holy light. [Purification B. V. M.] Written in 1890, and published as No. 247 in Novello's Christmas Carols. 5. Sweet Mary where she lay. [Annunciation B. V. M.] lncluded in Alston and Legge’s Twelve New Christmas Carols, 1894. See also Mr. Alston's translation of "0 Pater sancte," in the 1904 ed. of Hymns Ancient & Modern. His trs. from the Latin, Some Liturgical Hymns, &c. were published in 1903. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Mary Elizabeth Huey

Hymnal Number: 17 Author of "Serve the Lord with joy and gladness" in The Church Hymnary (3rd Ed.)

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