Search Results

Text Identifier:"^savior_in_the_words_i_say$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Texts

text icon
Text authorities

Savior, in the Words I Say

Author: Josephine L. Baldwin Appears in 6 hymnals First Line: Saviour, in the words I say Used With Tune: [Saviour, in the words I say]

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities
Page scansAudio

MERCY

Appears in 733 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Louis M. Gottschalk Incipit: 56513 32111 171 Used With Text: Savior, in the words I say
Page scansAudio

HORSHAM

Appears in 23 hymnals Tune Sources: English Traditional Melody Incipit: 33453 21335 55321 Used With Text: Saviour, in the words I say

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Savior, in the Words I Say

Author: Josephine L. Baldwin Hymnal: When Boys and Girls Sing #105 (1957) First Line: Saviour, in the words I say Languages: English Tune Title: [Saviour, in the words I say]
Page scan

Savior, in the words I say

Author: J. L. B. Hymnal: Services and Songs #37 (1923) Languages: English Tune Title: MERCY
Page scan

Savior, in the words I say

Author: Josephine L. Baldwin Hymnal: The Children's Hymnal and Service Book #77 (1929) Languages: English Tune Title: MERCY

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Louis M. Gottschalk

1829 - 1869 Composer of "MERCY" in Services and Songs Louis Moreau Gottschalk USA 1829-1869. Born in New Orleans, LA, to a Jewish father and Creole mother, he had six siblings and half-siblings. They lived in a small cottage in New Orleans. He later moved in with relatives (his grandmother and a nurse). He played the piano from an early age and was soon recognized as a prodigy by new Orleans bourgeois establishments. He made a performance debut at the new St. Charles Hotel in 1840. At 13 he left the U.S. And went to Europe with his father, as they realized he needed classical training to fulfill his musical ambitions. The Paris Conservatory rejected him without hearing him play on the grounds of his nationality. Chopin heard him play a concert there and remarked, “Give me your hand, my child, I predict that you will become the king of pianists. Franz Liszt and Charles Valentin Alkan also recognized his extreme talent. He became a composer and piano virtuoso, traveling far and wide performing, first back to the U.S., then Cuba, Puerto Rico, Central and South America. He was taken with music he heard in those places and composed his own. He returned to the States, resting in NJ, then went to New York City. There he mentored a young Venezuelan student, Carreno, and became concerned that she succeed. He was only able to give her a few lessons, yet she would remember him fondly and play his music the rest of her days. A year after meeting Gottschalk, she performed for President Lincoln and went on to become a renowned concern pianist, earning the nickname “Valkyrie of the Piano”. Gottschalk was also interested in art and made connections with notable figures of the New York art world. He traded one of his compositions to his art friend, Frederic Church, for one of Church's landscape paintings. By 1860 Gootschalk had established himself as the best known pianist in the New World. He supported the Union cause during the Civil War and returned to New Orleans only occasionally for concerts. He traveled some 95,000 miles and gave 1000 concerts by 1865. He was forced to leave the U.S. later that year as a result of a scandelous affair with a student at Oakland Female Seminary in Oakland, CA. He never came back to the U.S. He went to South America giving frequent concerts. At one, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he collapsed from yellow fever as he played a concert. He died three weeks later, never recovering from the collapse, possibly from an overdose of quinine or an abdominal infection. He was buried in Brooklyn, NY. Though some of his works were destroyed or disappeared after his death, a number of them remain and have been recorded by various artists. John Perry

Josephine L. Baldwin

Person Name: J. L. B. Author of "Savior, in the words I say" in Services and Songs
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.