Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^y_delyn_aur$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities

Y DELYN AUR

Appears in 6 hymnals Matching Instances: 6 Tune Sources: Welsh Melody Tune Key: g minor Incipit: 12345 54345 55123 Used With Text: Dechrau canu, dechrau canmol (Songs new-born and praise adawning)

Texts

text icon
Text authorities

Dechreu canu, dechru canmol (Singing through the countless ages)

Author: Pantycelyn. (1716-1791); Rev. Edward Roberts. Appears in 4 hymnals Matching Instances: 3 Used With Tune: Y DELYN AUR

Nid oes yno ddiwedd canu

Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Used With Tune: Y DELYN AUR
Page scans

Hark! the Joybells

Author: H. B. Jones Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 First Line: Hark! the joy bells now are ringing Used With Tune: Y DELYN AUR

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
Page scan

Dechreu canu, dechreu canmol (Singing through the countless ages)

Author: Pantycelyn; Rev. Edward Roberts Hymnal: Cân a Mawl #247 (1918) Languages: English; Welsh Tune Title: Y DELYN AUR

Dechrau canu, dechrau canmol (Songs new-born and praise adawning)

Author: W. W.; D. H.; D. H. Hymnal: Mawl a chân = praise and song #195 (1952) Languages: English; Welsh Tune Title: Y DELYN AUR

Dechreu canu, dechreu canmol (Singing through the countless ages)

Author: Pantycelyn; Rev. Edward Roberts. Hymnal: Old and New Welsh and English Hymns #82 (1939) Languages: Welsh Tune Title: Y DELYN AUR

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Pantycelyn

Author of "Dechreu canu, dechreu canmol (Singing through the countless ages)" in Cân a Mawl See Williams, William, 1717-1791

Edward Roberts

Person Name: Rev. Edward Roberts Translator of "Dechreu canu, dechreu canmol (Singing through the countless ages)" in Cân a Mawl Edward Roberts, Pontypridd. (Cân a Mawl, 1918, #19).

David Emlyn Evans

1843 - 1913 Person Name: D. Emlyn Evans Trefniad of "Y DELYN AUR" in Welsh and English Hymns and Anthems Born: September 21, 1843, Penralltwen, near Castellnewydd Emlyn (Castle Emlyn), Carmarthenshire, Wales. Died: January 19, 1913, Cemmaes, Montgomeryshire. Buried: Llandyfriog (near Newcastle Emlyn), Wales. Evans was a composer, adjudicator, conductor, editor, critic, music historian and entrepreneur. Frequently irascible, especially in his last years which he spent in severe and immobilizing pain, he was one of the foremost figures in Welsh musical life in the period leading up to World War I. He was self taught, via the most popular of all Welsh music publications, John Mills’ Gramadeg Cerddoriaeth, and the two parts of Thomas Williams’ Ceinion Cerddoriaeth (Musical Gems, 1852) with its 200 hymn tunes and seventy anthems and choruses. Later, formal lessons by a music teacher, Mr. Hughes of Llechryd, a few miles from his home, gave him a firmer grounding in the old notation used until 1858. The same year, in Bridgend, he sang his first song in public, conducted his first choir and won his first prize for composition. In 1863 he moved to Cheltenham, where he worked as a shop assistant and received further lessons in piano and organ. He became a commercial traveler in 1871, and traveled in this capacity for the next 20 years the length and breadth of Wales, making contacts and observing the growth of music throughout Wales. It was probably during his overnight stays in hotels that most of his musical compositions were created at the end of his working day. Throughout this period, 66 of his pieces won prizes in competitions in Wales, England and America. Evans’s works include: Y Caniedydd Cynulleidfaol, 1895 (editor) --www.hymntime.com/tch