Old hundredth: Difference between revisions

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== Settings with text ==
== Settings with text ==
* [[Praise God from whom all blessings flow (J. Ashley Hall)]]
* [[Praise God from whom all blessings flow (Louis Bourgeois)|Louis Bourgeois: ''Praise God from whom all blessings flow'']]
* [[Praise God from whom all blessings flow (Louis Bourgeois)|Louis Bourgeois: ''Praise God from whom all blessings flow'']]
* [[Bicinium for the Genevan Psalm 134 (Christoph Dalitz)|Christoph Dalitz: ''Bicinium for the Genevan Psalm 134'']]  ( [http://music.dalitio.de/choir/dalitz/psalter-bicinia/index.html#psalm134 {{net}}] )
* [[Bicinium for the Genevan Psalm 134 (Christoph Dalitz)|Christoph Dalitz: ''Bicinium for the Genevan Psalm 134'']]  ( [http://music.dalitio.de/choir/dalitz/psalter-bicinia/index.html#psalm134 {{net}}] )

Revision as of 05:28, 13 August 2010

{\key g \major g2 g4 fis | e d g2 | a b | b b4 b | a g c2 | b a} {\key g \major g2 a4 b | a g e2 | fis g |  d' b4 g | a c b2 |  a g \bar "||"}

Hymn tune, melody from Pseaumes octante trois de David, 1551.

Meter: 88. 88 (Long meter)

General information

The tune known today as Old hundredth is generally attributed to Loys Bourgeois and appeared in the second edition of the Genevan Psalter as a setting for Psalm 134. In English speaking countries, it is most closely associated with the singing of the Doxology and the text All people that on earth do dwell, made famous by Ralph Vaughan Williams setting for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953.

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