To celebrate thy praise, O Lord (Joseph Stephenson): Difference between revisions
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==General Information== | ==General Information== | ||
{{Title|''To celebrate thy praise, O Lord''}} | |||
{{Composer|Joseph Stephenson}} | {{Composer|Joseph Stephenson}} | ||
{{Lyricist|2|Nahum Tate|Nicholas Brady| (from ''A new version of the psalms of David'')}} | {{Lyricist|2|Nahum Tate|Nicholas Brady| (from ''A new version of the psalms of David'')}} |
Revision as of 21:48, 4 July 2020
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- Editor: Edmund Gooch (submitted 2011-01-28). Score information: A4, 1 page, 28 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: The alto part is printed in the alto clef in the source.
- The only indication of text in the source is the title 'Ps. 9th' and the opening words 'To Cellebrate &c.': the first four verses of the text have been underlaid editorially.
- The alto G on beat 3 of bar 11 does not have a natural in the source, but the tune is printed with a double barline separating beats 2 and 3 of this bar (i.e. separating the third and fourth lines of the tune): furthermore, there are examples elsewhere in Church Harmony of accidentals being repeated where they apply to more than one instance of the same note within a single bar, indicating that the accidentals only apply to the notes they immediately precede.
General Information
Title: To celebrate thy praise, O Lord
Composer: Joseph Stephenson
Lyricists: Nahum Tate and Nicholas Brady (from A new version of the psalms of David)
Number of voices: 4vv Voicing: SATB
Genre: Sacred, Hymn
Language: English
Instruments: A cappella
First published: 1757 in Church Harmony Sacred to Devotion, p. 35
Description: A setting of Psalm 9 in the metrical New Version. Hymn Tune Index tune number 2616.
External websites:
Original text and translations
Original text and translations may be found at Psalm 9.