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Text Identifier:"^holy_holy_holy_lord_be_thy_glorious_name$"

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Holy, holy, holy Lord

Appears in 127 hymnals Used With Tune: INNOCENTS

Tunes

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INNOCENTS

Appears in 450 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: W. H. Monk Incipit: 34517 65123 54323 Used With Text: Holy, holy, holy Lord
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WEBER

Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 608 hymnals Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 32436 53233 33471 Used With Text: Holy, holy, holy Lord!
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ALETTA

Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 239 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William Batchelder Bradbury Tune Sources: Jubilee (New York: 1858) Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 35122 21233 51222 Used With Text: Holy, Holy, Holy Lord

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Holy, holy, holy Lord, be thy glorious [gracious] name

Author: William Dodd Hymnal: Hymns for the use of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, by the Authority of the Ministerium of Pennsylvania #9 (1865) Languages: English
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Holy, holy, holy Lord, be thy glorious [gracious] name

Author: William Dodd Hymnal: A Collection of Hymns and a Liturgy #12 (1834) Languages: English
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Holy, holy, holy Lord, be thy glorious [gracious] name

Author: William Dodd Hymnal: A Collection of Hymns and a Liturgy for the Use of Evangelical Lutheran Churches #12 (1817) Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

William B. Bradbury

1816 - 1868 Person Name: William Batchelder Bradbury Composer of "ALETTA" in The Cyber Hymnal William Bachelder Bradbury USA 1816-1868. Born at York, ME, he was raised on his father's farm, with rainy days spent in a shoe-shop, the custom in those days. He loved music and spent spare hours practicing any music he could find. In 1830 the family moved to Boston, where he first saw and heard an organ and piano, and other instruments. He became an organist at 15. He attended Dr. Lowell Mason's singing classes, and later sang in the Bowdoin Street church choir. Dr. Mason became a good friend. He made $100/yr playing the organ, and was still in Dr. Mason's choir. Dr. Mason gave him a chance to teach singing in Machias, ME, which he accepted. He returned to Boston the following year to marry Adra Esther Fessenden in 1838, then relocated to Saint John, New Brunswick. Where his efforts were not much appreciated, so he returned to Boston. He was offered charge of music and organ at the First Baptist Church of Brooklyn. That led to similar work at the Baptist Tabernacle, New York City, where he also started a singing class. That started singing schools in various parts of the city, and eventually resulted in music festivals, held at the Broadway Tabernacle, a prominent city event. He conducted a 1000 children choir there, which resulted in music being taught as regular study in public schools of the city. He began writing music and publishing it. In 1847 he went with his wife to Europe to study with some of the music masters in London and also Germany. He attended Mendelssohn funeral while there. He went to Switzerland before returning to the states, and upon returning, commenced teaching, conducting conventions, composing, and editing music books. In 1851, with his brother, Edward, he began manufacturring Bradbury pianos, which became popular. Also, he had a small office in one of his warehouses in New York and often went there to spend time in private devotions. As a professor, he edited 59 books of sacred and secular music, much of which he wrote. He attended the Presbyterian church in Bloomfield, NJ, for many years later in life. He contracted tuberculosis the last two years of his life. John Perry

Anonymous

Author of "Holy, holy, holy Lord" in Songs for the Service of Prayer In some hymnals, the editors noted that a hymn's author is unknown to them, and so this artificial "person" entry is used to reflect that fact. Obviously, the hymns attributed to "Author Unknown" "Unknown" or "Anonymous" could have been written by many people over a span of many centuries.

John Wilkes

1782 - 1882 Arranger of "MONKLAND" in Songs of Praise with Tunes John Wilkes (b. England, date unknown; d. England, 1882) simplified the tune MONKLAND and introduced it to Henry W. Baker (PHH 342), who published it in the English Hymns Ancient and Modern (1861) to his own harvest-theme text, "Praise, O Praise Our God and King." Wilkes named the tune after the village where he was organist and Baker was vicar–Monkland–located near Leominster in Herefordshire, England. Wilkes died around 1882; he should not be confused with the better-known John Bernard Wilkes (1785-1869). --Psalter Hymnal Handbook, 1998
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