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Text Identifier:"^save_me_o_god_for_the_waters_have$"

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LORD, I Call to You for Help

Appears in 3 hymnals Matching Instances: 3 First Line: Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck Refrain First Line: LORD, I call to you for help Topics: Blessing; Cross; Death; Despair; Distress; Enemies; Face of the Lord; God as Loving; Holy Week; Loneliness; Passion Sunday; Prayer; Prophecy; Suffering; Zion Scripture: Psalm 69 Used With Tune: ABERYSTWYTH

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[Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck]

Appears in 2 hymnals Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: Michel Guimont, 1950- Tune Key: a minor Incipit: 17127 54 Used With Text: Psalm 69
Audio

ABERYSTWYTH

Appears in 255 hymnals Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: Joseph Parry; Hal H. Hopson Tune Key: e minor or modal Incipit: 11234 53213 21712 Used With Text: LORD, I Call to You for Help

[Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck]

Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: Kermit G. Moldenhauer Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 55113 55644 53 Used With Text: In Your Love, O LORD, Answer Me

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Psalm 69

Hymnal: Hymns for a Pilgrim People #650 (2007) First Line: Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck Refrain First Line: Lord, in your great love, answer me Scripture: Psalm 69 Languages: English Tune Title: [Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck]

LORD, I Call to You for Help

Hymnal: Christian Worship #69A (2021) First Line: Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck Refrain First Line: LORD, I call to you for help Topics: Blessing; Cross; Death; Despair; Distress; Enemies; Face of the Lord; God as Loving; Holy Week; Loneliness; Passion Sunday; Prayer; Prophecy; Suffering; Zion Scripture: Psalm 69 Languages: English Tune Title: ABERYSTWYTH

In Your Love, O LORD, Answer Me

Hymnal: Christian Worship #69D (2021) First Line: Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck Topics: Blessing; Cross; Death; Despair; Distress; Enemies; Face of the Lord; God as Loving; Holy Week; Loneliness; Passion Sunday; Prayer; Prophecy; Suffering; Zion Scripture: Psalm 69 Languages: English Tune Title: [Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Michel Guimont

b. 1950 Person Name: Michel Guimont, 1950- Composer of "[Save me, O God, for the waters have come up to my neck]" in Hymns for a Pilgrim People

Joseph Parry

1841 - 1903 Composer (refrain) of "ABERYSTWYTH" in Christian Worship Joseph Parry (b. Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorganshire, Wales, 1841; d. Penarth, Glamorganshire, 1903) was born into a poor but musical family. Although he showed musical gifts at an early age, he was sent to work in the puddling furnaces of a steel mill at the age of nine. His family immigrated to a Welsh settlement in Danville, Pennsylvania in 1854, where Parry later started a music school. He traveled in the United States and in Wales, performing, studying, and composing music, and he won several Eisteddfodau (singing competition) prizes. Parry studied at the Royal Academy of Music and at Cambridge, where part of his tuition was paid by interested community people who were eager to encourage his talent. From 1873 to 1879 he was professor of music at the Welsh University College in Aberystwyth. After establishing private schools of music in Aberystwyth and in Swan sea, he was lecturer and professor of music at the University College of South Wales in Cardiff (1888-1903). Parry composed oratorios, cantatas, an opera, orchestral and chamber music, as well as some four hundred hymn tunes. Bert Polman

Hal H. Hopson

b. 1933 Composer (tone) of "ABERYSTWYTH" in Christian Worship Hal H. Hopson (b. Texas, 1933) is a prolific composer, arranger, clinician, teacher and promoter of congregational song, with more than 1300 published works, especially of hymn and psalm arrangements, choir anthems, and creative ideas for choral and organ music in worship. Born in Texas, with degrees from Baylor University (BA, 1954), and Southern Baptist Seminary (MSM, 1956), he served churches in Nashville, TN, and most recently at Preston Hollow Presbyterian Church in Dallas, Texas. He has served on national boards of the Presbyterian Association of Musicians and the Choristers Guild, and taught numerous workshops at various national conferences. In 2009, a collection of sixty four of his hymn tunes were published in Hymns for Our Time: The Collected Tunes of Hal H. Hopson. Emily Brink