Person Results

Text Identifier:bless_the_lord_bless_the_lord_o_my_soul
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 81 - 90 of 161Results Per Page: 102050

Richard Smallwood

b. 1948 Person Name: Richard Smallwood, b. 1948 Arranger of "BLESS THE LORD" in Psalms for All Seasons Richard Smallwood (b. Washington, D.C., 1948), a composer, arranger, pianist, and innovator in the African American gospel style. Many of his arrangements of gospel hymns appear in Lift Every Voice and Sing (1981). Organized by Smallwood in 1967, the Richard Smallwood Singers have sung and recorded many of his arrangements. He remains their current director. Smallwood has a BM degree from Howard University, Washington, DC. Bert Polman

George A. Macfarren

1813 - 1887 Person Name: G. A. Macfarren Composer of "[Bless the Lord, O my soul]" in Sunday-School Book George Alexander Macfarren, Mus. Doc.; b. London, 1813; d. London, 1887 Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908 ======================= Born: March 2, 1813, Westminster, England. Died: October 31, 1887, St. Marylebone, England. Buried: Hampstead Cemetery, London, England. Brother of Walter Macfarren, George was a principal of the Royal Academy of Music; professor at Cambridge University; conductor at Covent Garden, London; program note writer for the Philharmonic Society; and editor of Handel and Purcell. He wrote 18 operas, 13 oratorios and cantatas, 9 symphonies, and 162 songs. He went blind in 1860, and was knighted in 1883. Sources: Frost, p. 681 Lightwood, p. 189 Nutter, p. 460 http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/m/a/c/macfarren_ga.htm =============================== http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Alexander_Macfarren

C. Streetfield

Composer of "LANGTON" in Hymns of the Ages

Jeanne Cotter

b. 1964 Author of "Psalm 103: The Lord Is Kind and Merciful" in RitualSong (2nd ed.)

William Amps

1824 - 1910 Person Name: William Amps, 1824-1910 Composer of "VENICE" in Together in Song Amps was educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge (BA 1858, MA 1862). He played the organ at King’s College (1855-76) and Christ’s College. He also conducted the Cambridge University Musical Society for many years. Amps composed a good deal of music, including piano sonatas and part songs.

Thomas Sternhold

1449 - 1549 Person Name: T. Sternhold Author of "O Thou My Soul!" in Redemption Songs Thomas Sternhold was Groom of the Robes to Henry VIII and Edward VI. With Hopkins, he produced the first English version of the Psalms before alluded to. He completed fifty-one; Hopkins and others composed the remainder. He died in 1549. Thirty-seven of his psalms were edited and published after his death, by his friend Hopkins. The work is entitled "All such Psalms of David as Thomas Sternhold, late Groome of the King's Majestye's Robes, did in his Lyfetime drawe into Englyshe Metre." Of the version annexed to the Prayer Book, Montgomery says: "The merit of faithful adherence to the original has been claimed for this version, and need not to be denied, but it is the resemblance which the dead bear to the living." Wood, in his "Athenae Oxonlenses" (1691, vol. I, p. 62), has the following account of the origin of Sternhold's psalms: "Being a most zealous reformer, and a very strict liver, he became so scandalized at the amorous and obscene songs used in the Court, that he, forsooth, turned into English metre fifty-one of David's psalms, and caused musical notes to be set to them, thinking thereby that the courtiers would sing them instead of their sonnets; but they did not, some few excepted. However, the poetry and music being admirable, and the best that was made and composed in these times, they were thought fit to be sung in all parochial churches." Of Sternhold and Hopkins, old Fuller says: "They were men whose piety was better than their poetry, and they had drunk more of Jordan than of Helicon." Sternhold and Hopkins may be taken as the representatives of the strong tendency to versify Scripture that came with the Reformation into England--a work men eagerly entered on without the talent requisite for its successful accomplishment. The tendency went so far, that even the "Acts of the Apostles" was put into rhyme, and set to music by Dr. Christopher Tye. --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, M.A. 1872.

Tom Kendzia

Person Name: Tim Kendzia, b. 1954 Author of "Come, O Spirit of the Lord" in Glory and Praise (3rd. ed.)

Eugene Englert

Person Name: Eugene E. Englert Harmonizer of "[Bless the Lord, O my soul]" in One in Faith

Ken Canedo

Person Name: Ken Canedo, b. 1953 Composer of "[Bless the LORD, O my soul!]" in Glory and Praise (3rd. ed.)

Paul Lisicky

b. 1959 Author of "Psalm 104: Lord, Send Out Your Spirit" in Worship (4th ed.)

Pages


Export as CSV