Person Results

Meter:6.6.6.6 d
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 61 - 70 of 114Results Per Page: 102050

James Carter Knox

1849 - 1930 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Composer of "CONCORD (Knox)"

Ernest A. Dicks

Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Composer of "ST. LUKE (Dicks)"

L. H. Wilson

Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Author of "One Thousand-Million Souls" in The Cyber Hymnal

Jorge Maldonado

b. 1944 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Author of "Sent by the Lord am I" in Church Hymnary (4th ed.)

José Aguiar

Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Author of "Sent by the Lord am I" in Singing the Faith

A. J. Showalter

1858 - 1924 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Composer of "[Each day, dear Lord, I need Thy presence and Thy peace]" Anthony Johnson Showalter USA 1858-1924/ Born in Cherry Grove, VA, he became an organist, gospel music composer, author, teacher, editor, and publisher. He was taught by his father and in 1876 received training at the Ruebush-Kieffer School of Music, Dayton, VA. He also attended George Root’s National Normal school at Erie, PA, and Dr Palmer’s International Normal at Meadville, PA. He was teaching music in shape note singing schools by age 14. He taught literary school at age 19, and normal music schools at age 22, when he also published his first book. In 1881 he married Lucy Carolyn (Callie) Walser of TX, and they had seven children: Tennie, Karl, Essie, Jennie, Lena, Margaret, and Nellie. At age 23 he published his “Harmony & composition” book, and years later his “Theory of music”. In 1884 he moved to Dalton, GA, and in 1890 formed the Showalter Music Company of Dalton. His company printed and published hymnals, songbooks, schoolbooks, magazines, and newspapers, and had offices in Texarkana, AR, and Chattanooga, TN. In 1888 he became a member of the M T N A (Music Teachers National Association) and was vice-president for his state for several years. In 1895 he went abroad to study methods of teachers and conductors in Europe. He held sessions of his Southern Normal Music Institute in a dozen or more states. He edited “The music teacher & home magazine” for 20 years. In 1895 he issued his “New harmony & composition” book. He authored 60+ books on music theory, harmony, and song. He published 130+ music books that sold over a million copies. Not only was he president of the A J Showalter Music Company of Dalton, GA, but also of the Showalter-Patton Company of Dallas, TX, two of the largest music publishing houses in the American south. He was a choir leader and an elder in the First Presbyterian Church in Dalton (and his daughter, Essie, played the organ there). He managed his fruit farm, looking after nearly 20,000 trees , of which 15,000 are the famous Georgia Elberta peaches, the rest being apples, plums, pecans, and a dozen other varieties of peaches. He was also a stockholder and director of the Cherokee Lumber Company of Dalton, GA, furnishing building materials to a large trade in many southern, central and eastern states. He died in Chattanooga, TN, and is buried in Dalton, GA. He loved hymns, and kept up with many of his students over the years, writing them letters of counsel and encouragement. In 2000 Showalter was inducted into the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Note: Showalter received two letters one evening from former music students, both of who were grieving over the death of their wives. He had heard a sermon about the arms of Moses being held up during battle, and managed to form a tune and refrain for a hymn, but struggled to find words for the verses that fit. He wrote to his friend in OH, Rev Elisha Hoffman, who had already composed many hymns and asked if he could write some lyrics, which he gladly did. John Perry

Joseph P. Holbrook

1822 - 1888 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Arranger of "JEWETT" in Trinity Hymnal (Rev. ed.) Joseph P. Holbrook was a tune writer in the parlor music style, and used the popular melodies of Mason and Hastings, Bradbury and Root, Greatorex and Kingsley in his collections. He furnished settings for the choir hymns in Songs for the Sanctuary in his Quartet and chorus Choir (New York, 1871, and sought more recogniation than had been given him in a hymnal of his own, Worship in Song (New York, 1880); a book that found no welcome. from The English hymn: its development and use in worship By Louis FitzGerald Benson

Eugene Thomas

b. 1941 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Composer (choral ending) of "MADRID" in The Hymnal for Worship and Celebration

Benjamin Carr

1768 - 1831 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Arranger of "MADRID" in The Presbyterian Hymnal

Geoffrey Beaumont

1903 - 1970 Meter: 6.6.6.6 D Composer of "CHESTERTON (Beaumont)"

Pages


Export as CSV