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Search Results

Text Identifier:"^jesus_we_come_at_thy_command$"

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Texts

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Jesus we come at Thy command

Appears in 15 hymnals Used With Tune: WINDHAM

Tunes

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WINDHAM

Appears in 214 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Daniel Read Incipit: 13455 32113 23543 Used With Text: Jesus we come at Thy command

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Jesus, we come at thy command

Hymnal: The Saints' Harp #d456 (1870)
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Jesus, we come at thy command

Hymnal: The Young Christian's Companion. 2nd ed. #a36 (1829)
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Jesus, we come at thy command

Hymnal: Baptist Hymn Book #a777 (1847) Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Daniel Read

1757 - 1836 Composer of "WINDHAM" in Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book Daniel Read; b. 1757, Rehoboth, Mass.; d. 1837, New Haven, Conn.An American composer and a primary figure in early American classical music. He was one of the “Yankee Tunesmiths” (1st New England School of Music) when classical music was popular in Europe. Read was a private in Massachusetts militia and later a comb maker and owner of a general store in New Haven, CN. He was only the 3rd composer in the U. S. to put out a collection of his own music. His work, “The American Singing Book” went through 5 editions, making him the most popular composer in the nation. Others often plagarized his tunes in those days. Tunebook sales supplemented his general store income, including “The Columbian Harmonist” (3 volumnes) with 3 revisions, and “The New Haven Collection of Sacred Music” 1818. Read also published “The American Musical magazine” in 12 annual issues in 1786 and 1787. In later years he came to appreciate European music more and imitated that styling in devotional music. Some of Read's music is still being performed, and selections have been published in “The Sacred Harp”, 1991 Edition, and the “Stoughton Music Society” (Centennial Collection 1980). John Perry