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Search Results

All:singing

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Texts

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Mear

Author: Isaac Watts Appears in 144 hymnals First Line: Sing to the Lord Jehovah's name Lyrics: 1 Sing to the Lord Jehovah's ... sight, And psalms of honor sing; The Lord's a God ... Topics: Praise Used With Tune: [Sing to the Lord Jehovah's name]
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My Beautiful Home

Author: C. P. Whitford Appears in 341 hymnals First Line: I'll sing you a song of a beautiful land Refrain First Line: That beautiful home, oh, I long to be there Used With Tune: [I'll sing you a song of a beautiful land]

My Heart Sings Out With Joyful Praise

Author: Ruth C. Duck Meter: 8.6.8.6 D Appears in 6 hymnals

Tunes

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MENDELSSOHN

Meter: 7.7.7.7 D Appears in 635 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Felix Mendelssohn, 1809-1847; William H. Cummings, 1831=1915 Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 51171 33255 54323 Used With Text: Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
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[My Jesus, my Saviour]

Appears in 35 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Darlene Zschech Tune Key: B Flat Major Incipit: 34571 21111 75361 Used With Text: Shout to the Lord, all the earth, let us sing
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MY REDEEMER

Meter: 8.7.8.7 with refrain Appears in 207 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: James McGranahan (1840-1907) Tune Key: A Flat Major Incipit: 51233 32122 57244 Used With Text: I Will Sing of My Redeemer

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Merrily Sing

Author: H. L. Hymnal: Glad Tidings in Song #57 (1921) First Line: Merrily sing your song Refrain First Line: Sing, merrily sing Lyrics: ... : Sing, merrily sing, Sing the songs of the gospel light, Sing, merrily sing, Fill ... with its message bright; Sing, merrily sing, Till the echoes return ... made strong. 2 Merrily sing your song, cheering the ... load. [Refrain] 3 Merrily sing your song, shorten the ... Topics: Choruses Languages: English Tune Title: [Merrily sing your song]

My heart will sing to you (Great love)

Author: Robin Mark Hymnal: Complete Anglican Hymns Old and New #460 (2000) First Line: My heart will sing to you because of your great love Refrain First Line: May my heart sing your praise for ever Lyrics: My heart will sing to you because of ... Topics: Joy, Praise and Thanksgiving; Protection Languages: English Tune Title: [My heart will sing to you because of your great love]
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My Heart Is Singing

Author: E. K. H. Hymnal: Conquest Hymns #44 (1902) First Line: All day long my heart is singing Refrain First Line: All the day my heart is singing Languages: English Tune Title: [All day long my heart is singing]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

John Mason

1645 - 1694 Person Name: John Mason, c1645-1694 Author of "How shall I sing that majesty" in CPWI Hymnal Mason, John. The known facts of his life are scanty. He was the son of a Dissenting Minister, and the grandfather of John Mason, the author of A Treatise on Self-Knowledge. He was educated at Strixton School, Northants, and Clare Hall, Cambridge. After taking his M.A., he became Curate of Isham; and in 1668, Vicar of Stantonbury, Bucks. A little more than five years afterwards he was appointed Rector of Water-Stratford. Here he composed the volume containing The Songs of Praise, his paraphrase of The Song of Solomon, and the Poem on Dives and Lazarus, with which Shepherd's Penitential Cries was afterwards bound up. This volume passed through twenty editions. Besides the Songs of Praise, it contains six Penitential Cries by Mason, and it is this portion of his work which harmonizes with the compositions of Shepherd. Probably his hymns were used in public worship, and if so, they are among the earliest hymns so used in the Church of England. Some of his hymns are often found in the early Hymn Collections of the 18th century. The most notable work besides this volume is Select Remains of the Rev, John Mason, a collection of sententious and practical sayings and Christian letters, published by his grandson, and much eulogized by Dr. Watts. His friend, Shepherd, who was at Water-Stratford at the remarkable period to which reference is made below, published two of Mason's Sermons, with a preface of his own. Mason was a man of true piety and humility; known for eminent prayerfulness; faithful, experimental, effectual preaching; "a light in the pulpit, and a pattern out of it." His friendship with Baxter, and Shepherd, the Nonconformist Minister of Braintree, probably indicates his sympathies and theological position. Baxter calls him "the glory of the Church of England," and says :— "The frame of his spirit was so heavenly, his deportment so humble and obliging, his discourse of spiritual things so weighty, with such apt words and delightful air, that it charmed all that had any spiritual relish.” The close of his life was sensational enough. One night, about a month before his death, he had a vision of the Lord Jesus, wearing on His head a glorious crown, and with a look of unutterable majesty in His face. Of this vision he spoke; and preached a Sermon called The Midnight Cry, in which he proclaimed the near approach of Christ's Second Advent. A report spread that this Advent would take place at Water-Stratford itself, and crowds gathered there from the surrounding villages. Furniture and provisions were brought in, and every corner of the house and village occupied. Most extraordinary scenes occurred, singing and leaping and dancing. The excitement had scarcely died out when the old man passed away (1694), still testifying that he had seen the Lord, and that it was time for the nation to tremble, and for Christians to trim their lamps. His last words were, “I am full of the loving kindness of the Lord." [Rev. H. Leigh Bennett, M.A.] The full titles of his Songs of Praise, and the additions thereto, are:— (1) Spiritual Songs; or, Songs of Praise to Almighty God upon several occasions, 1683. (2) The Song of Songs which is Solomon's first Turned, then Paraphrased in English Verse. Published with the former. (3) Dives and Lazarus, incorporated with the former 1685. (4) Penitential Cries, Begun by the Author of the Songs of Praise, And carried on by another Hand. Licensed and Entered, Sept. 13, 1693. This forms the concluding part of all editions of the Songs of Praise after 1693. The complete work was reprinted by D. Sedgwick in 1859. This reprint was accompanied by a short Memoir. In this reprint Mason's Penitential Cries and Ps. 86 are given under Songs of Praise, pp. 49-61, those under Penitential Cries being all by Shepherd (q.v.). Mason's Life, by John Dunton, was published in 1694, and included some miscellaneous poems; and another, by Henry Maurice, in 1695, in which are two hymns not found elsewhere. We may add that Mason published a Catechism, with some Verses for Children. Of this, however, no copy is known to exist. Mason's Songs are commonly presented in modern hymnbooks in the form of centos, which are sometimes compiled from a single Song, and in other instances from several Songs. Many of these are annotated under their respective first lines. The rest include:— 1. Blest be my God that I was born. Praise for the Gospel. 2. Lord, for the mercies of the night. Morning. 3. Lord of my life, Length of my days. Praise for Deliverance from Immediate danger of Death. 4. My God, a God of pardon is. Praise for Pardon of Sin. 5. My God, my only Help and Hope. Praise for Providence. 6. My God, my reconciled God. Praise for Peace of Conscience. 7. My God was with me all this night. Morning. 8. Thou wast, 0 God; and Thou wast blest. Praise for Creation. 9. Thousands of thousands stand around. Praise. A cento from Songs i. and ii. In Griffith, Farran & Co.'s Ancient and Modern Library, No. 12, Giles Fletcher's Christ's Victory and Triumph, &c, 1888, p. 208 (edited by W. T. Brooke), a short hymn by Mason is given from Multum in Parvo: or the Jubilee of Jubilees, 1732, beginning "High praises meet and dwell within." It is an indifferent example of Mason's powers as a writer of sacred verse. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ==================== Mason, J., p. 716, ii. Mason's Midnight Cry, stated on p. 717, i. as having been preached in 1694, was delivered in 1691. The 1st ed. of this sermon is:— “The Midnight Cry. A Sermon Preached On the Parable of the Ten Virgins . . . . By J. M., M.A., Rector of W. in the County of B., London: Nathanael Ranew . . 1691. This edition has no hymns. To the 4th ed. in 1692, published by the same Nathanael Ranew, there was added:— The Fourth Edition, with the Addition of two Hymns for the Coming of Christ. By the same Author. The first of these hymns begins:— "The evening of the Day Portends a dismal night," and is in 12 stanzas of 8 lines. The second hymn is:— "Come, come, my dearest, dearest Lord, Make haste and come away." This is in 14 stanzas of 4 lines. Of the first and fifth eds. there are copies in the Brit. Museum, and of the first in the Julian Collection of the Church House, London. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

B. B. McKinney

1886 - 1952 Arranger of "[Oh, for a thousand tongues to sing]" in The Modern Hymnal Pseudonyms-- Martha Annis (his mother’s maiden name was Martha Annis Heflin) Otto Nellen Gene Routh (his wife’s maiden name was Leila Irene Routh) ----- Son of James Calvin McKinney and Martha Annis Heflin McKinney, B . B. attended Mount Lebanon Academy, Louisiana; Louisiana College, Pineville, Louisiana; the Southwestern Baptist Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas; the Siegel-Myers Correspondence School of Music, Chicago, Illinois (BM.1922); and the Bush Conservatory of Music, Chicago. Oklahoma Baptist University awarded him an honorary MusD degree in 1942. McKinney served as music editor at the Robert H. Coleman company in Dallas, Texas (1918–35). In 1919, after several months in the army, McKinney returned to Fort Worth, where Isham E. Reynolds asked him to join the faculty of the School of Sacred Music at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. He taught at the seminary until 1932, then pastored in at the Travis Avenue Baptist Church in Fort Worth (1931–35). In 1935, McKinney became music editor for the Baptist Sunday School Board in Nashville, Tennessee. McKinney wrote words and music for about 150 songs, and music for 115 more. --© Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.com/tch)

Hubert P. Main

1839 - 1925 Arranger of "ELLESDIE" in The Hymnbook Hubert Platt Main DD USA 1839-1925. Born at Ridgefield, CT, he attended singing school as a teenager. In 1854 he went to New York City and worked as an errand boy in a wallpaper house. The next year he became an errand boy in the Bristow & Morse Piano Company. He was an organist, choir leader, and compiled books of music. He also helped his father edit the “Lute Songbook” by Isaac Woodbury. In 1866 he married Olphelia Louise Degraff, and they had two sons: Lucius, and Hubert. In 1867 he filled a position at William B Bradbury’s publishing house. After Bradbury’s death in 1868 the Bigelow & Main Publishers were formed as its successor. He also worked with his father until his father’s death in 1873. Contributors to their efforts were Fanny Crosby, Ira Sankey, Wilbur Crafts, and others. In addition to publishing, Main wrote 1000+ pieces of music, including part song, singing school songs, Sunday school music, hymns, anthems, etc. He also arranged music and collected music books. He 1891 he sold his collection of over 3500 volumes to the Newberry Library in Chicago, IL, where they were known as the Main Library. Some of his major publications include: “Book of Praise for the Sunday school” (1875), “Little pilgrim songs” (1884), “Hymns of Praise” (`1884), “Gems of song for the Sunday school” (1901), “Quartettes for men’s voices: Sacred & social selections” (1913). In 1922 Hope Publishing Company acquired Bigelow & Main. He was an editor, author, compiler, and composer, as well as publisher. He died in Newark, NJ. John Perry

Hymnals

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Published hymn books and other collections

Manual of Hymns for Congregational Singing, Prayers and Pious Practices

Publication Date: 1903 Publisher: Popp & Hogan Publication Place: San Jose, Calif. Editors: Popp & Hogan
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Messages of Love Hymn Book

Publication Date: 1920 Publisher: Bible Truth Depot Publication Place: St. Louis, Mo. Editors: Bible Truth Depot

My Little Singing Book

Publication Date: 1843 Publisher: D. S. King & Co. Publication Place: Boston Editors: A. Fitz; D. S. King & Co.

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The cantor intones each Christological title, e.g., “Jesus, Lamb of God,” “Prince of Peace”…