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Person Results

Text Identifier:"^go_labor_on_spend_and_be_spent$"
In:people

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Showing 31 - 40 of 48Results Per Page: 102050

Heinrich Christoph Zeuner

Person Name: H. C. Zeuner Composer of "MISSIONARY CHANT" in Fellowship Hymns See Zeuner, Charles, 1795-1857

William Boyd

1847 - 1928 Person Name: Boyd Composer of "PENTECOST" in Trinity Hymnal (Rev. ed.) William Boyd Jamaica 1847-1928. Born at Montego Bay, he studied under Sabine-Baring Gould, and attended Worcester College,Oxford. He was ordained an Anglican priest in 1877, eventually becoming Vicar at All Saints Church, Norfolk Square, London. John Perry

F. Reginald Statham

b. 1844 Person Name: F. R. Statham Composer of "TROYLAND" in Hymns of the Faith Poet, musician, novelist, journalist, essayist LOC Name Authority Files

Ralph Harrison

1748 - 1810 Person Name: R. Harrison Composer of "ST. GEORGE" in Methodist Tune Book

Berthold Tours

1838 - 1897 Composer of "MARKEN" in Hymns of the Living Church

Henry Duncalf

Composer of "ST. BARTHOLOMEW" in Christian Praise

William Smallwood

1831 - 1897 Person Name: William Smallwood, 1831-1897 Composer of "ANTWERP" in The Book of Praise

Charles Zeuner

1795 - 1857 Person Name: C. Zeuner Composer of "[Go, labor on! spend and be spent]" in The Hymnal, Revised and Enlarged, as adopted by the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America in the year of our Lord 1892 Also: Zeuner, Heinrich Christoph, 1795-1857 Zeuner, Heinrich Christopher, 1795-1857

John Baptiste Calkin

1827 - 1905 Person Name: J. B. Calkin Composer of "CAMDEN" in The Church Hymnal John Baptiste Calkin United Kingdom 1827-1905. Born in London, he was reared in a musical atmosphere. Studying music under his father, and with three brothers, he became a composer, organist, and music teacher. At 19, he was appointed organist, precenter, and choirmaster at St. Columbia's College, Dublin, Ireland, 1846 to 1853. From 1853 to 1863 we was organist and choirmaster at Woburn Chapel, London. From 1863 to 1868, he was organist of Camden Road Chapel. From 1870 to 1884 he was organist at St. Thomas's Church, Camden Town. In 1883 he became professor at Guildhall School of Music and concentrated on teaching and composing. He was also a professor of music and on the council of Trinity College, London, and a member of the Philharmonic Society (1862). In 1893 he was a fellow of the College of Organists. John and wife, Victoire, had four sons, each following a musical carer. He wrote much music for organ and scored string arrangements, sonatas, duos, etc. He died at Hornsey Rise Gardens. John Perry

Henry J. Gauntlett

1805 - 1876 Person Name: Henry John Gauntlett, Mus.D. (1806-1876) Composer of "Denbigh" in The Evangelical Hymnal with Tunes Henry J. Gauntlett (b. Wellington, Shropshire, July 9, 1805; d. London, England, February 21, 1876) When he was nine years old, Henry John Gauntlett (b. Wellington, Shropshire, England, 1805; d. Kensington, London, England, 1876) became organist at his father's church in Olney, Buckinghamshire. At his father's insistence he studied law, practicing it until 1844, after which he chose to devote the rest of his life to music. He was an organist in various churches in the London area and became an important figure in the history of British pipe organs. A designer of organs for William Hill's company, Gauntlett extend­ed the organ pedal range and in 1851 took out a patent on electric action for organs. Felix Mendelssohn chose him to play the organ part at the first performance of Elijah in Birmingham, England, in 1846. Gauntlett is said to have composed some ten thousand hymn tunes, most of which have been forgotten. Also a supporter of the use of plainchant in the church, Gauntlett published the Gregorian Hymnal of Matins and Evensong (1844). Bert Polman

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