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Tune Identifier:"^tribute_we_render_ascher$"

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[Tribute we render]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: J. Ascher; Alfred Judson Incipit: 51217 66567 65 Used With Text: Youth's Triumph Song

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Youth's Triumph Song

Author: Mattie B. Shannon Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: Tribute we render Refrain First Line: Hail Thee Lord divine Used With Tune: [Tribute we render]
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Come, Blest Redeemer

Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: O come, blest Redeemer! Refrain First Line: O come, blest Redeemer! Used With Tune: [O come, blest Redeemer!]

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Youth's Triumph Song

Author: Mattie B. Shannon Hymnal: Gloria in Excelsis #106 (1933) First Line: Tribute we render Refrain First Line: Hail Thee Lord divine Languages: English Tune Title: [Tribute we render]
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Come, Blest Redeemer

Hymnal: Rodeheaver Collection for Male Voices #37 (1916) First Line: O come, blest Redeemer! Refrain First Line: O come, blest Redeemer! Languages: English Tune Title: [O come, blest Redeemer!]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Alfred Judson

Arranger of "[Tribute we render]" in Gloria in Excelsis Pseudonym. See also Joseph Lincoln Hall, 1866-1930

Mattie B. Shannon

1885 - 1980 Author of "Youth's Triumph Song" in Gloria in Excelsis Used pseudonym Martha Bayly

Joseph Ascher

1829 - 1869 Person Name: J. Ascher Composer of "[Tribute we render]" in Gloria in Excelsis Joseph Ascher, born in London in 1831, died there, June 3, 1869. Pianist, pupil of Moscheles, whom he followed to the Conservatorium at Leipsic. He went to Paris in 1849 and became court pianist to the Empress Eugénie. His best known compositions are two mazurkas, la perle du Nord and Dozia, and an étude, Les gouttes d'eau; besides these, he wrote over a hundred gallops, nocturnes, mazurkas, transcriptions, and études. His song, Alice, where art thou is still a favourite at concerts. Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians by John Denison Camplin, Jr. and William Foster Apthorp (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1888)
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