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Search Results

Text Identifier:"^with_love_and_peace_and_joy_supreme$"

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Texts

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With Love and Peace and Joy supreme

Author: Laura C. Nourse, alt. and abr. Appears in 9 hymnals

Tunes

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REDEEMER

Appears in 190 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: G. F. Handel; Frederic W. Root Incipit: 51321 64343 51276 Used With Text: With love and peace and joy supreme
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ACH GOTT UND HERR

Meter: 8.7.8.7 Appears in 131 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: C. Peter; J. S. Bach Tune Key: B Flat Major Incipit: 17655 67121 76765 Used With Text: With love and peace and joy supreme
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GOLDEN SHEAVES

Appears in 43 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Arthur S. Sullivan Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 53554 32112 34671 Used With Text: With love and peace and joy supreme

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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With Love and Peace and Joy supreme

Author: Laura C. Nourse, alt. and abr. Hymnal: Christian Science Hymnal #a122 (1903) Languages: English
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With Love and Peace and Joy supreme

Author: Laura C. Nourse, alt. and abr. Hymnal: Christian Science Hymnal #aa122 (1905) Languages: English
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With Love and Peace and Joy supreme

Author: Laura C. Nourse Hymnal: Christian Science Hymnal #122a (1893) Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

George Frideric Handel

1685 - 1759 Person Name: G. F. Handel Composer of "REDEEMER" in Christian Science Hymnal George Frideric Handel (b. Halle, Germany, 1685; d. London, England, 1759) became a musician and composer despite objections from his father, who wanted him to become a lawyer. Handel studied music with Zachau, organist at the Halle Cathedral, and became an accomplished violinist and keyboard performer. He traveled and studied in Italy for some time and then settled permanently in England in 1713. Although he wrote a large number of instrumental works, he is known mainly for his Italian operas, oratorios (including Messiah, 1741), various anthems for church and royal festivities, and organ concertos, which he interpolated into his oratorio performances. He composed only three hymn tunes, one of which (GOPSAL) still appears in some modern hymnals. A number of hymnal editors, including Lowell Mason, took themes from some of Handel's oratorios and turned them into hymn tunes; ANTIOCH is one example, long associated with “Joy to the World.” Bert Polman

Johann Sebastian Bach

1685 - 1750 Person Name: J. S. Bach Harmonizer of "ACH GOTT UND HERR" in Christian Science Hymnal (Rev. and enl.) Johann Sebastian Bach was born at Eisenach into a musical family and in a town steeped in Reformation history, he received early musical training from his father and older brother, and elementary education in the classical school Luther had earlier attended. Throughout his life he made extraordinary efforts to learn from other musicians. At 15 he walked to Lüneburg to work as a chorister and study at the convent school of St. Michael. From there he walked 30 miles to Hamburg to hear Johann Reinken, and 60 miles to Celle to become familiar with French composition and performance traditions. Once he obtained a month's leave from his job to hear Buxtehude, but stayed nearly four months. He arranged compositions from Vivaldi and other Italian masters. His own compositions spanned almost every musical form then known (Opera was the notable exception). In his own time, Bach was highly regarded as organist and teacher, his compositions being circulated as models of contrapuntal technique. Four of his children achieved careers as composers; Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, and Chopin are only a few of the best known of the musicians that confessed a major debt to Bach's work in their own musical development. Mendelssohn began re-introducing Bach's music into the concert repertoire, where it has come to attract admiration and even veneration for its own sake. After 20 years of successful work in several posts, Bach became cantor of the Thomas-schule in Leipzig, and remained there for the remaining 27 years of his life, concentrating on church music for the Lutheran service: over 200 cantatas, four passion settings, a Mass, and hundreds of chorale settings, harmonizations, preludes, and arrangements. He edited the tunes for Schemelli's Musicalisches Gesangbuch, contributing 16 original tunes. His choral harmonizations remain a staple for studies of composition and harmony. Additional melodies from his works have been adapted as hymn tunes. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Arthur Sullivan

1842 - 1900 Person Name: Arthur S. Sullivan Composer of "GOLDEN SHEAVES" in Christian Science Hymnal (Rev. and enl.) Arthur Seymour Sullivan (b Lambeth, London. England. 1842; d. Westminster, London, 1900) was born of an Italian mother and an Irish father who was an army band­master and a professor of music. Sullivan entered the Chapel Royal as a chorister in 1854. He was elected as the first Mendelssohn scholar in 1856, when he began his studies at the Royal Academy of Music in London. He also studied at the Leipzig Conservatory (1858-1861) and in 1866 was appointed professor of composition at the Royal Academy of Music. Early in his career Sullivan composed oratorios and music for some Shakespeare plays. However, he is best known for writing the music for lyrics by William S. Gilbert, which produced popular operettas such as H.M.S. Pinafore (1878), The Pirates of Penzance (1879), The Mikado (1884), and Yeomen of the Guard (1888). These operettas satirized the court and everyday life in Victorian times. Although he com­posed some anthems, in the area of church music Sullivan is best remembered for his hymn tunes, written between 1867 and 1874 and published in The Hymnary (1872) and Church Hymns (1874), both of which he edited. He contributed hymns to A Hymnal Chiefly from The Book of Praise (1867) and to the Presbyterian collection Psalms and Hymns for Divine Worship (1867). A complete collection of his hymns and arrangements was published posthumously as Hymn Tunes by Arthur Sullivan (1902). Sullivan steadfastly refused to grant permission to those who wished to make hymn tunes from the popular melodies in his operettas. Bert Polman
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