Charles Albert Tindley: Difference between revisions

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==Publications==
==Publications==
*1905 – ''[[Soul Echoes]]'', with George Lincoln Blackwell and Josiah Samuel Caldwell, second edition 1909
*1905 – ''[[Soul Echoes]]'', with George Lincoln Blackwell and Josiah Samuel Caldwell, second edition 1909
*1919 – ''New Songs of Paradise''
*1916 – ''[[New Songs of Paradise]]''


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 17:02, 22 June 2022

Life

Born: 7 July 1851 in Berlin, Maryland

Died: 26 July 1933 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Biography

American Methodist minister and gospel music composer. Born to Charles and Esther Miller Tindley; his mother died when he was two, then raised by his father. Largely self-educated, but his knowledge of the Bible and preaching given high praise by many. Joined Bainbridge Street Methodist Church in 1880, serving as a janitor – but in 1902 assigned to the same church as their pastor. The church moved to a larger site in 1906 and renamed East Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church. It grew greatly under his leadership, eventually becoming a multiracial congregation of over 10,000. Tindley wrote over 40 hymns, many still in use today.

View the Wikipedia article on Charles Albert Tindley.

List of choral works

Arrangements by Charles Albert Tindley

 
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Publications

References

  • Kimbrough, S. T. Jr. and Carlton R. Young. 2006. Beams of Heaven: Hymns of Charles Albert Tindley. New York: General Board of Global Ministries, United Methodist Church.
  • Abbington, James. 2006. Introduction. In Beams of Heaven: Hymns of Charles Albert Tindley. Reprinted in Abbington, James. 2009. Let the Church Sing On! Chicago: GIA Publications, pp. 47-57.

External links