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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^segne_uns_bach$"

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SEGNE UNS

Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 6 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Johann Sebastian Bach Tune Sources: Chorale 38 (adapt.) Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 34551 23671 3545 Used With Text: As We Leave This Friendly Place

Texts

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As We Leave This Friendly Place

Author: Vincent B. Silliman Appears in 5 hymnals Used With Tune: SEGNE UNS

Father, as thy children part

Author: Doris W. Street Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 1 hymnal Topics: For Younger Children General Used With Tune: SEGNE UNS

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

As We Leave This Friendly Place

Author: Vincent B. Silliman Hymnal: A Hymnal for Friends #7 (1955) Tune Title: SEGNE UNS

As We Leave This Friendly Place

Author: Vincent B. Silliman Hymnal: A Hymnal for Friends #177 (1942) Languages: English Tune Title: SEGNE UNS

Father, as thy children part

Author: Doris W. Street Hymnal: The Beacon Song and Service book #287 (1935) Meter: 7.7.7.7 Topics: For Younger Children General Languages: English Tune Title: SEGNE UNS

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Johann Sebastian Bach

1685 - 1750 Person Name: Johann Sebastian Bach, 1685-1750 Composer of "SEGNE UNS" in A Hymnal for Friends Johann Sebastian Bach was born at Eisenach into a musical family and in a town steeped in Reformation history, he received early musical training from his father and older brother, and elementary education in the classical school Luther had earlier attended. Throughout his life he made extraordinary efforts to learn from other musicians. At 15 he walked to Lüneburg to work as a chorister and study at the convent school of St. Michael. From there he walked 30 miles to Hamburg to hear Johann Reinken, and 60 miles to Celle to become familiar with French composition and performance traditions. Once he obtained a month's leave from his job to hear Buxtehude, but stayed nearly four months. He arranged compositions from Vivaldi and other Italian masters. His own compositions spanned almost every musical form then known (Opera was the notable exception). In his own time, Bach was highly regarded as organist and teacher, his compositions being circulated as models of contrapuntal technique. Four of his children achieved careers as composers; Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, and Chopin are only a few of the best known of the musicians that confessed a major debt to Bach's work in their own musical development. Mendelssohn began re-introducing Bach's music into the concert repertoire, where it has come to attract admiration and even veneration for its own sake. After 20 years of successful work in several posts, Bach became cantor of the Thomas-schule in Leipzig, and remained there for the remaining 27 years of his life, concentrating on church music for the Lutheran service: over 200 cantatas, four passion settings, a Mass, and hundreds of chorale settings, harmonizations, preludes, and arrangements. He edited the tunes for Schemelli's Musicalisches Gesangbuch, contributing 16 original tunes. His choral harmonizations remain a staple for studies of composition and harmony. Additional melodies from his works have been adapted as hymn tunes. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Vincent B. Silliman

1894 - 1979 Author of "As We Leave This Friendly Place" in A Hymnal for Friends Silliman, Rev. Vincent Brown, D.D. (Hudson, Wisconsin, June 29, 1894-Feb. 1979, Yarmouth, Maine). He graduated from Meadville Theological School in 1920 and from the University of Minnesota in 1925. He served Unitarian churches in Buffalo, New York; Portland, Maine; Hollis, N.Y.; and Chicago, Illinois. He was a member of the committee which edited The Beacon Song and Service Book for Children and Young People (1935), and edited We Sing of Life (1955), an unusual collection of songs for children and young people, with a strong ethical emphasis, some set to familiar hymn tunes, others to interesting folk music. Mr. Silliman contributed to words of several songs. One of them, beginning "Morning, so fair to see" is also included in Hymns of the Spirit (1937). --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

Doris W. Street

Author of "Father, as thy children part" in The Beacon Song and Service book
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