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Scripture:Psalm 139:1-6
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Thomas Tallis

1505 - 1585 Person Name: Thos. Tallis Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer of "[All-seeing Lord, whose pow'r unknown]" in Hymns Thomas Tallis (b. Leicestershire [?], England, c. 1505; d. Greenwich, Kent, England 1585) was one of the few Tudor musicians who served during the reigns of Henry VIII: Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth I and managed to remain in the good favor of both Catholic and Protestant monarchs. He was court organist and composer from 1543 until his death, composing music for Roman Catholic masses and Anglican liturgies (depending on the monarch). With William Byrd, Tallis also enjoyed a long-term monopoly on music printing. Prior to his court connections Tallis had served at Waltham Abbey and Canterbury Cathedral. He composed mostly church music, including Latin motets, English anthems, settings of the liturgy, magnificats, and two sets of lamentations. His most extensive contrapuntal work was the choral composition, "Spem in alium," a work in forty parts for eight five-voice choirs. He also provided nine modal psalm tunes for Matthew Parker's Psalter (c. 1561). Bert Polman

Laurence Bévenot

1901 - 1990 Person Name: LB Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer (Psalm tone) of "[Your hand is ever upon me]" in Worship (3rd ed.)

Joseph Gelineau

1920 - 2008 Person Name: JG Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer (Gelineau Tone) of "[Your hand is ever upon me]" in Worship (3rd ed.) Joseph Gelineau (1920-2008) Gelineau's translation and musical settings of the psalms have achieved nearly universal usage in the Christian church of the Western world. These psalms faithfully recapture the Hebrew poetic structure and images. To accommodate this structure his psalm tones were designed to express the asymmetrical three-line/four-line design of the psalm texts. He collaborated with R. Tournay and R. Schwab and reworked the Jerusalem Bible Psalter. Their joint effort produced the Psautier de la Bible de Jerusalem and recording Psaumes, which won the Gran Prix de L' Academie Charles Cros in 1953. The musical settings followed four years later. Shortly after, the Gregorian Institute of America published Twenty-four Psalms and Canticles, which was the premier issue of his psalms in the United States. Certainly, his text and his settings have provided a feasible and beautiful solution to the singing of the psalms that the 1963 reforms envisioned. Parishes, their cantors, and choirs were well-equipped to sing the psalms when they embarked on the Gelineau psalmody. Gelineau was active in liturgical development from the very time of his ordination in 1951. He taught at the Institut Catholique de Paris and was active in several movements leading toward Vatican II. His influence in the United States as well in Europe (he was one of the founding organizers of Universa Laus, the international church music association) is as far reaching as it is broad. Proof of that is the number of times "My shepherd is the Lord" has been reprinted and reprinted in numerous funeral worship leaflets, collections, and hymnals. His prolific career includes hundreds of compositions ranging from litanies to responsories. His setting of Psalm 106/107, "The Love of the Lord," for assembly, organ, and orchestra premiéred at the 1989 National Association of Pastoral Musicians convention in Long Beach, California. --www.giamusic.com

Gregory Murray

1905 - 1992 Person Name: AGM Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer (Antiphon) of "[Your hand is ever upon me]" in Worship (3rd ed.)

Richard Proulx

1937 - 2010 Person Name: RP Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer of "[You have searched me, and you know me, Lord]" in Worship (3rd ed.) Richard Proulx (b. St. Paul, MN, April 3, 1937; d. Chicago, IL, February 18, 2010). A composer, conductor, and teacher, Proulx was director of music at the Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago, Illinois (1980-1997); before that he was organist and choirmaster at St. Thomas' Episcopal Church in Seattle, Washington. He contributed his expertise to the Roman Catholic Worship III (1986), The Episcopal Hymnal 1982, The United Methodist Hymnal (1989), and the ecumenical A New Hymnal for Colleges and Schools (1992). He was educated at the University of Minnesota, MacPhail College of Music in Minneapolis, Minnesota, St. John's Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota, and the Royal School of Church Music in England. He composed more than 250 works. Bert Polman

T. Barrett Armstrong

1929 - 2009 Person Name: TBA Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer of "[I praise you for I am wonderfully made]" in Catholic Book of Worship III

Geoffrey Laycock

b. 1927 Person Name: Geoffrey Laycock, b. 1926 Scripture: Psalm 139 Arranger of "NOËL NOUVELET" in Singing the Faith Geoffrey Laycock (b. 1927) was director of music at a teachers college in Norwich. --The Presbyterian Hymnal Companion, 1993

Chrysogonus Waddell

1930 - 2008 Scripture: Psalm 139 Composer (Psalm tone) of "[Search me, O God, and know my heart]" in Hymns for a Pilgrim People

Geoffrey Cox

b. 1951 Scripture: Psalm 139:6-12 Composer of "PSALM 139" in Together in Song

Michel Guimont

b. 1950 Scripture: Psalm 139:1-3 Composer of "[O Lord, you search me and you know me]" in RitualSong

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