Ambassador Hymnal #421
Tune Title: NAOMI First Line: Approach, my soul, the mercy-seat Composer: Lowell Mason, 1792-1872 Meter: CM Key: D Major Date: 1994
Ambassador Hymnal #421

Dr. Lowell Mason (the degree was conferred by the University of New York) is justly called the father of American church music; and by his labors were founded the germinating principles of national musical intelligence and knowledge, which afforded a soil upon which all higher musical culture has been founded. To him we owe some of our best ideas in religious church music, elementary musical education, music in the schools, the popularization of classical chorus singing, and the art of teaching music upon the Inductive or Pestalozzian plan. More than that, we owe him no small share of the respect which the profession of music enjoys at the present time as contrasted with the contempt in which it was held a century or more ago. In fact, the… Go to person page >
Johann G. Nageli (b. Wetzikon, near Zurich, Switzerland, 1773; d. Wetzikon, 1836) was an influential music educator who lectured throughout Germany and France. Influenced by Johann Pestalozzi, he published his theories of music education in Gangbildungslehre (1810), a book that made a strong impact on Lowell Mason. Nageli composed mainly" choral works, including settings of Goethe's poetry. He received his early instruction from his father, then in Zurich, where he concentrated on the music of. S. Bach. In Zurich, he also established a lending library and a publishing house, which published first editions of Beethoven’s piano sonatas and music by Bach, Handel, and Frescobaldi.
Bert Polman
Go to person page >| Title: | NAOMI (Nägeli) |
| Composer (attributed to): | Hans G. Nägeli (1836) |
| Arranger: | Lowell Mason |
| Meter: | 8.6.8.6 |
| Incipit: | 33354 32343 36654 |
| Key: | D Major |
| Copyright: | Public Domain |
NAOMI was a melody that Lowell Mason (PHH 96) brought to the United States from Europe and arranged as a hymn tune; the arrangement was first published in the periodical Occasional Psalm and Hymn Tunes (1836). Some scholars have attributed the original melody to Johann G. Nageli (PHH 315), but there is little evidence to substantiate this claim. The name NAOMI has no specific significance, though Mason did often assign biblical names to his hymn tunes. Sing this typically serviceable Mason tune in parts, possibly unaccompanied, and keep the tempo moving.
--Psalter Hymnal Handbook, 1988
Piano/OrganMore Piano/Organ... | ![]() |
ChoralMore Choral... | ![]() |
PowerPointMore PowerPoint... | ![]() |
Harmonizations, Introductions, Descants, Intonations
|
Organ Solo
|
Piano Solo
|
Piano and Organ Duet
|
My Starred Hymns