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Hymnal, Number:hv1910

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Hymnals

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Published hymn books and other collections
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Heart and Voice

Publication Date: 1910 Publisher: Geo. H. Ellis Co. Publication Place: Boston Editors: Chas. W. Wendte, D. D.; Geo. H. Ellis Co.

Texts

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God is Good

Author: J. H. Gurney; Eliza Follen Appears in 69 hymnals First Line: Yes, God is good: in earth and sky Used With Tune: DUKE STREET
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The Day of Days

Author: Anna Laetitia Barbauld Appears in 289 hymnals First Line: Again the Lord of life and light Used With Tune: GOULD
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Consecration

Author: Frances R. Havergal Appears in 1,213 hymnals First Line: Take my life, and let it be Used With Tune: POSEN

Tunes

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ST. STEPHEN'S

Appears in 357 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William Jones Incipit: 15312 17123 45123 Used With Text: Christian Fellowship
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CREATION

Appears in 312 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Joseph Haydn Incipit: 51122 31621 75671 Used With Text: Thy Works Praise Thee
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BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC

Appears in 452 hymnals Incipit: 55554 35123 33211 Used With Text: Battle Hymn of the Republic

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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With Heart and Voice

Author: F. L. Hosmer Hymnal: HV1910 #1 (1910) First Line: With heart and voice together Languages: English Tune Title: [With heart and voice together]
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Welcome

Author: J. Vila Blake Hymnal: HV1910 #2a (1910) First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and hearts sincere Languages: English Tune Title: [Welcome, welcome is the greeting]
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Welcome

Author: J. Vila Blake Hymnal: HV1910 #2b (1910) First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and hearts sincere Languages: English Tune Title: [Welcome, welcome is the greeting]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Jane M. Campbell

1817 - 1878 Hymnal Number: 188 Translator of "We Plough the Fields" in Heart and Voice Campbell, Jane Montgomery, daughter of the Rev. A. Montgomery Campbell, born in London, 1817, died at Bovey Tracey, Nov. 15, 1878. Miss Campbell contributed in 1861, a number of translations from the German to the Rev. C. S. Bere's Garland of Songs; or, an English Liederkranz, 1862; and also to his Children’s Choral Book, 1869. The best known and most widely used of these translations is a portion of "Im Anfang war's auf Erden," as the harvest hymn, "We plough the fields and scatter.” Miss Campbell also published A Handbook for Singers, Lond., Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, n.d. This small work contains the musical exercises which she taught in her father's parish school. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Henry Carey

1687 - 1743 Person Name: H. Carey Hymnal Number: 307 Composer of "[My country, 'tis of thee]" in Heart and Voice Henry Carey, b. 1685 (?); d. London, 1743 Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908

J. A. P. Schulz

1747 - 1800 Hymnal Number: 188 Composer of "[We plough the fields and scatter]" in Heart and Voice Johann Abraham Peter Schulz Germany 1747-1800. Born at Luneburg, Germany, son of a baker, he attended St Michaelis school in Luneburg and studied organ, then the Johanneum from 1759-1764. In 1765 he was a student of composer, Johann Kimberger, and then taught in Berlin himself. In 1768 Kimberger recommended Schulz for the position of music teacher and accompanist to the Polish Princess Sapieha Woiwodin von Smolensk. Schulz moved to Berlin and traveled with her for three years performing throughout Europe, where he came in contact with many new musical ideas. He married Catharina Maria Gercken, and they had a daughter, Celle. He served as the conductor of the French Theatre in Berlin from 1776-1780. From 1786-1787 he was the Kapellmeister of Prince Henry in Rheinsberg. He began writing operas in 1785 and became musical director of the Berlin French theatre. Schulz went on to serve as Court Kapellmeister in Copenhagen from 1787-1795 before returning to Berlin. In Copenhagen the music library burned down, and he had a breakdown in health from trying to save it. His health suffered further from the effects of a shipwreck he experienced in 1796. Schulz wrote seven operas, stage music, oratorios, and cantatas, as well as piano pieces, folk songs, and church music. He also wrote articles on music theory for Johann Georg Sulzer’s ‘Allgemeine Theorie der schonen Kunste’ in four volumes. He died at Schwedt an der Oder, Germany. John Perry