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Person Results

Text Identifier:"^again_as_evenings_shadow_falls$"
In:people

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Showing 21 - 30 of 31Results Per Page: 102050

R. DeWitt Mallary

1851 - 1911 Person Name: R. DeW. Mallary Composer of "TERRY" in Pilgrim Songs (Number Two) Born: September 28, 1851. Died: January 29, 1911, Springfield, Massachusetts. Buried: Church on the Hill Cemetery, Lenox, Massachusetts. Music: ELMCROFT MALLARY SOJOURNER WORTHINGTON http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/m/a/l/mallary_rd.htm

William T. Noss

Composer of "INTERCESSION" in The Chapel Hymnal

Frank Leslie Stone

Person Name: F. L. Stone Arranger of "[Again, as evening's shadow falls]" in The Endeavor Hymnal

Albert J. Holden

1841 - 1916 Composer of "[Again, as evening's shadow falls]" in Evangel Songs A Founder of the American Guild of Organists and composer and editor of numerous pieces and collections of sacred music (of which perhaps Songs of Faith, Hope and Love, 1883, is best known), Albert Junos Holden was born in Boston on August 17, 1841. He studied in New York City, and served there as organist of the Church of the Divine Paternity (Universalist) and of the Church of the Puritans (Presbyterian). His sacred solo "In Heavenly Love Abiding" was recorded by the "Metropolitan Quartet" on an Edison Blue Amberol cylinder, No. 3813, in 1919. He died in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, on July 16, 1916. (source: AGO Founders Hymnal, p. 98)

Eaton Faning

1850 - 1927 Composer of "HARROW" in The Church Hymnary Born: May 20, 1850, Helston, Cornwall, England. Died: October 28, 1927, Brighton, England. Faning is remembered as a teacher, choral conductor, and composer. His parents taught him the violin and pianoforte, and he was performing in local concerts by age five. He entered the Royal Academy of Music (RAM) in 1870, studying under Sterndale Bennett, Steggall, Ciabatta, and Sullivan. In 1874, he won the Mendelssohn Scholarship. He began teaching at the RAM in 1874, and his operetta The Two Majors was performed there in 1877. He later taught at the National Training School and at Harrow School, from which he retired in 1901. He also found time to conduct the London Male Voice Club and the Madrigal Society. He received a MusB degree from Cambridge in 1894, and MusD in 1900. --www.hymntime.com/tch

George Hews

1806 - 1873 Composer of "[Again, as evening's shadow falls]" in Glorious Gospel Hymns Born: January 6, 1806, Weston, Massachusetts. Died: July 6, 1873, Boston, Massachusetts.

Herbert Stanley Oakeley

1830 - 1903 Person Name: Herbert S. Oakeley (1830-1903) Composer of "ABENDS" in The Hymnbook

Georg Joseph

1630 - 1668 From of "ANGELUS" in The Book of Common Praise Born: Probably circa 1630, Breslau, Silesia (now Wrocław, Poland). Died: Circa 1668. A musician in the service of the Prince-Bishop of Breslau in last half of the 17th Century, Joseph collaborated published five hymn volumes with Johann Scheffler. Sources Erickson, p. 325 Stulken, p. 218 Music: ANGELUS --www.hymntime.com/tch

Timothy R. Matthews

1826 - 1910 Person Name: Timothy R. Matthews, 1826-1910 Composer of "LUDBOROUGH" in Hymns for Schools and Colleges Timothy Richard Matthews MusB United Kingdom 1826-1910. Born at Colmworth, England, son of the Colmworth rector, he attended the Bedford and Gonville Schools and Caius College, Cambridge. In 1853 he became a private tutor to the family of Rev Lord Wriothesley Russell, a canon of St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, where he studied under organist, George Elvey, subsequently a lifelong friend. He married Margaret Mary Thompson, and they had 11 children: Norton, Mary, George, Cecil, Evelyn, Eleanor, Anne, Arthur, Wilfred, Stephen, and John. Matthews served as Curate and Curate-in-Charge of St Mary’s Church, Nottingham (1853-1869). While there, he founded the Nottingham Working Men’s Institute. He became Rector at North Coates, Lincolnshire (1869-1907). He retired in 1907 to live with his eldest son, Norton, at Tetney vicarage. He edited the “North Coates supplemental tune book” and “Village organist”. An author, arranger, and editor, he composed morning and evening services, chants, and responses, earning a reputation for simple but effective hymn tunes, writing 100+. On a request he wrote six tunes for a children’s hymnal in one day. He composed a Christmas carol and a few songs. His sons, Norton, and Arthur, were also known as hymn tune composers. He died at Tetney, Lincolnshire, England. John Perry

Thomas B. Southgate

1814 - 1868 Person Name: Thomas B. Southgate, 1814-1868 Composer of "BROOKFIELD" in Hymnal and Liturgies of the Moravian Church Southgate, Thomas Bishop, born at Hornsey, Middlesex, June 8, 1814; educated in the school of the Chapel Royal, where he was a chorister; studied harmony under Thomas Attwood and Sir John Goss, and the organ under Samuel Wesley; organist of Hornsey Church from 1834 to 1853, and of St Anne's, Highgate Rise, London, from the latter year until his death, which occured at Highgate, November 3, 1868. EVENSONG, No. 320 F.C.H., was published in sheet form in 1858, set to the words "God that madest earth and heaven." --James Love, Scottish Church Music: Its Composers and Sources (1891)

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