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Almighty one, whose tender thought

Author: Rosalie M. Cody

(no biographical information available about Rosalie M. Cody.) Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Almighty one, whose tender thought
Author: Rosalie M. Cody
Copyright: Public Domain

Tune

BROMLEY (Haydn)

The tune BROMLEY is usually credited to Jeremiah Clarke (1674-1707) but there is an authorship problem: the first published use of the tune and setting was Franz Josef Haydn's "O let me in th'accepted hour," a metrical setting of Psalm 69 in Improved Psalmody (1794). The earliest extant version attr…

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EISENACH (Gesius)

MACHS MIT MIR was first published in the collection of music Das ander Theil des andern newen Operis Geistlicher Deutscher Lieder (1605) by Bartholomäus Gesius (b. Münchenberg, near Frankfurt, Germany, c. 1555; d. Frankfurt, 1613). A prolific composer, Gesius wrote almost exclusively for the churc…

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Timeline

Instances

Instances (1 - 3 of 3)
Page Scan

Hymns for the Living Age #243

The Hymnal #333

The Saints' Hymnal #d14

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