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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^since_i_have_found_my_redeemer_dalton$"

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Tunes

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Tune authorities

[Since I have found my redeemer and friend]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Marvin P. Dalton Used With Text: Never Alone

Texts

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Text authorities

Never Alone

Author: Adger M. Pace; Marvin P. Dalton Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: Since I have found my redeemer and friend Refrain First Line: No never alone Used With Tune: [Since I have found my redeemer and friend]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Never Alone

Author: Adger M. Pace; Marvin P. Dalton Hymnal: Radio Beams #160 (1944) First Line: Since I have found my redeemer and friend Refrain First Line: No never alone Languages: English Tune Title: [Since I have found my redeemer and friend]

Never Alone

Author: Adger M. Pace Hymnal: Sing Aloud #160 (1944) First Line: Since I have found my redeemer and friend Refrain First Line: No never alone Languages: English Tune Title: [Since I have found my redeemer and friend]

Never Alone

Author: Adger M. Pace Hymnal: Gleams of Glory #160 (1946) First Line: Since I have found my redeemer and friend Refrain First Line: No never alone Languages: English Tune Title: [Since I have found my redeemer and friend]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Adger M. Pace

1882 - 1959 Versifier of "Never Alone" in Radio Beams Born: August 13, 1882, Pelzer, South Carolina. Died: February 12, 1959, Lawrence County Hospital, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. Buried: Dunn Methodist Church Cemetery, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee. Pseudonyms: Millard A. Glenn; Charles H. Huff; Audalene Mayfield; Fay Wallington. Born August 13, 1882 near Pelzer, South Carolina, Adger M. Pace soon gained a love and appreciation for music that characterized the remainder of his life. He sang bass for seventeen years as a member of the Vaughan Radio Quartet, singing over WOAN--one of the South's first radio stations. He was also active in singing conventions, serving as one of the organizers and the first president of the National Singing Convention in 1937. Pace's most significant contribution was as a teacher of gospel music. He taught harmony, counterpoint and composition in the Vaughan School of Music in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, educating the first generation of Southern gospel Music leaders. Beginning in 1920, he served for 37 years as Music Editor for all Vaughan publications. He was also a notable songwriter--composing more than a thousand songs in his career. Among his many popular contributions were "That Glad Reunion Day," "Jesus Is All I Need," "The Home-coming Week," "The Happy Jubilee," and "Beautiful Star of Bethlehem." www.sgma.org/inductee_bios

Marvin P. Dalton

1906 - 1987 Author of "Never Alone" in Radio Beams Marvin Price Dalton born in Arkansas, died in Oklahoma Dianne Shapiro, from Find a Grave website (accessed 6/20/2022)
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