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Text Identifier:"^bowed_low_in_supplication$"

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Bowed low in supplication

Appears in 8 hymnals Used With Tune: SACRIFICE

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KILMOREY

Meter: 7.6.7.6 D Appears in 6 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John Ambrose Lloyd, Jr., 1840-1914 Tune Key: g minor Incipit: 11234 52232 13271 Used With Text: Bowed low in supplication
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BREMEN

Appears in 354 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Melchior Vulpius Incipit: 13234 53654 32356 Used With Text: Bowed low in supplication
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S. VICTOR

Appears in 9 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Richard Redhead Incipit: 51317 65512 35234 Used With Text: Bowed low in supplication

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Bowed low in supplication

Hymnal: Church Hymnal, Third Edition #258 (1919) Languages: English

Bowed low in supplication

Hymnal: Church Hymnal, Fourth Edition #266 (1960) Meter: 7.6.7.6 Languages: English
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Bowed low in supplication

Hymnal: The Scottish Hymnal #337a (1892) Languages: English Tune Title: S. VICTOR

People

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Melchior Vulpius

1570 - 1615 Composer of "BREMEN" in The Scottish Hymnal Born into a poor family named Fuchs, Melchior Vulpius (b. Wasungen, Henneberg, Germany, c. 1570; d. Weimar, Germany, 1615) had only limited educational oppor­tunities and did not attend the university. He taught Latin in the school in Schleusingen, where he Latinized his surname, and from 1596 until his death served as a Lutheran cantor and teacher in Weimar. A distinguished composer, Vulpius wrote a St. Matthew Passion (1613), nearly two hundred motets in German and Latin, and over four hundred hymn tunes, many of which became popular in Lutheran churches, and some of which introduced the lively Italian balletto rhythms into the German hymn tunes. His music was published in Cantiones Sacrae (1602, 1604), Kirchengesangund Geistliche Lieder (1604, enlarged as Ein schon geistlich Gesanglmch, 1609), and posthumous­ly in Cantionale Sacrum (1646). Bert Polman

Richard Redhead

1820 - 1901 Composer of "S. VICTOR" in The Scottish Hymnal Richard Redhead (b. Harrow, Middlesex, England, 1820; d. Hellingley, Sussex, England, 1901) was a chorister at Magdalen College, Oxford. At age nineteen he was invited to become organist at Margaret Chapel (later All Saints Church), London. Greatly influencing the musical tradition of the church, he remained in that position for twenty-five years as organist and an excellent trainer of the boys' choirs. Redhead and the church's rector, Frederick Oakeley, were strongly committed to the Oxford Movement, which favored the introduction of Roman elements into Anglican worship. Together they produced the first Anglican plainsong psalter, Laudes Diurnae (1843). Redhead spent the latter part of his career as organist at St. Mary Magdalene Church in Paddington (1864-1894). Bert Polman

Henry Lahee

1826 - 1912 Person Name: H. Lahee Composer of "SACRIFICE" in The Church Hymnary Born: April 11, 1826, Chelsea, London, England. Died: April 29, 1912, London, England. Lahee studied under John Goss and William Sterndale Bennett. He played the organ at several churches, including Holy Trinity Church, Brompton (1847-74). He won prizes for his compositions in Bristol, Manchester, Glasgow, and London, and set to music poems by Edgar Allen Poe ("The Bells"), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ("Building of the Ship") and Alfred Tennyson ("Sleeping Beauty"). His works include: Metrical Psalter, with William Irons, 1855 Famous Singers of Today and Yesterday, 1898 One Hundred Hymn Tunes Sources: Frost, p. 680 CS Concordance, pp. 246-47 Nutter, p. 460 --www.hymntime.com/tch
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