Weeping Mary (Jeremiah Ingalls): Difference between revisions
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==Music files== | ==Music files== | ||
{{#Legend:}} | {{#Legend:}} | ||
*{{PostedDate|2017-05-10}} {{CPDLno|44439}} [[Media:WeepingMaryIngalls1805a.pdf|{{pdf}}]] | *{{PostedDate|2017-05-10}} {{CPDLno|44440}} [[Media:WeepingMaryIngalls1805bpr.pdf|{{pdf}}]] [[Media:WeepingMaryIngalls1805bpr.mid|{{mid}}]] [[Media:WeepingMaryIngalls1805bpr.mxl|{{XML}}]] | ||
{{Editor|Barry Johnston|2017-05-10}}{{ScoreInfo| | {{Editor|Barry Johnston|2017-05-10}}{{ScoreInfo|Letter|1|73}}{{Copy|Public Domain}} | ||
:'''Edition notes:''' Oval note edition, as written in 1805. Four C. M. D. stanzas with chorus included, as shown below. | |||
*{{PostedDate|2017-05-10}} {{CPDLno|44439}} [[Media:WeepingMaryIngalls1805a.pdf|{{pdf}}]] | |||
{{Editor|Barry Johnston|2017-05-10}}{{ScoreInfo|7 x 10 inches (landscape)|1|46}}{{Copy|Public Domain}} | |||
:'''Edition notes:''' Note shapes added (4-shape). Four C. M. D. stanzas with chorus included, as shown below. | :'''Edition notes:''' Note shapes added (4-shape). Four C. M. D. stanzas with chorus included, as shown below. | ||
==General Information== | ==General Information== | ||
{{Title|''Weeping Mary''}} | |||
{{FirstLine|Come all ye mourning pilgrims now}} | |||
{{Composer|Jeremiah Ingalls}} | {{Composer|Jeremiah Ingalls}} | ||
{{Lyricist|Anonymous}} | {{Lyricist|Anonymous}} | ||
{{Voicing|3|STB}}<br> | {{Voicing|3|STB}}<br> | ||
{{Genre|Sacred|}} | {{Genre|Sacred|}} {{Meter|86. 86. D (C.M.D.)}}, plus chorus (86.86) | ||
{{Language|English}} | {{Language|English}} | ||
{{Instruments|A cappella}} | {{Instruments|A cappella}} | ||
{{ | {{Pub|1|1805|in Ingalls' ''[[The Christian Harmony (Jeremiah Ingalls)|The Christian Harmony]]'', p. 73, for three voices: Treble-Tenor-Bass.}} | ||
{{Descr| Meter of the music is 86. 86. 86. 86. (C. M. D.) – Ingalls repeated the second couplet to accommodate the chorus. Probably a folk hymn (Jackson 1952, no. 101). Stanza 4 borrowed from an older folk hymn (Jackson 1953b, nos. 47 and 164) | |||
Words by an unknown author, before 1790. The meter of words printed in Ingalls doesn't match his music: probably a misprint, since the words in ''Hymns and Spiritual Songs for the Use of Christians'' does fit his music.}} | |||
{{ExtWeb|}} | |||
==Original text and translations== | |||
{{top}} | |||
{{Text|English| | |||
''Salvation to our King'' | |||
1. Come all ye mourning pilgrims now, | |||
The joyful news I'll tell, | |||
The Lord hath sent salvation down. | |||
To save our souls from hell. | |||
The angels brought the tidings down, | |||
To shepherds in the field, | |||
That God to men is reconciled, | |||
His Son to men revealed. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
:Sing glory, honor to the Lord, | |||
:Salvation to our King, | |||
:Let all that's washed in Jesus' blood, | |||
:His glorious praises sing. | |||
' | 2. Come all ye poor despised souls. | ||
Unto his fold repair, | |||
Where God his boundless love unfolds, | |||
And says he'll meet you there. | |||
His glorious presence fills our souls, | |||
With songs of loudest praise, | |||
Let all that want a Savior dear, | |||
Their hearts and voices raise. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
:Sing glory, honor to the Lord, | |||
:Salvation to our King, | |||
:Let all that's washed in Jesus' blood, | |||
:His glorious praises sing. | |||
'' | 3. There's glory, glory in my soul. | ||
It came from heaven above. | |||
Which makes me praise my God so bold, | |||
And his dear children love. | |||
I'll serve the bleeding Lamb of God, | |||
I love his ways so well, | |||
Because his precious blood was spilt | |||
To save my soul from hell. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
:Sing glory, honor to the Lord, | |||
:Salvation to our King, | |||
:Let all that's washed in Jesus' blood, | |||
:His glorious praises sing. | |||
4. When weeping Mary came to seek | |||
{{ | Her Lord with a perfume, | ||
The wrapper and the sheet she found | |||
Together in the tomb; | |||
The angel said he is not here, | |||
He's risen from the dead; | |||
And streams of grace to sinners flow, | |||
As free as did his blood. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
:Sing glory, honor to my God, | |||
:He's now upon his throne, | |||
:And bringing foreign strangers home. | |||
:And claims them for his own. | |||
From ''Hymns and Spiritual Songs for the Use of Christians'', Philadelphia, 1803}} | |||
{{middle|3}} | |||
{{Text|Simple| | |||
''Weeping Mary'' | |||
1. Come all ye mourning pilgrims now, | |||
The joyful news I'll tell, | |||
The Lord hath sent salvation down. | |||
To save our souls from hell. | |||
The angels brought the tidings down, | |||
To shepherds in the field, | |||
That God to men is reconciled, | |||
His Son to men revealed. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
:Sing glory, honor to the Lord, | |||
:Salvation to our King, | |||
:Let all that's washed in Jesus' blood, | |||
:His glorious praises sing. | |||
3. Come all ye poor despised souls. | |||
Unto his fields repair, | |||
When God his boundless love unfolds, | |||
And says he'll meet us there. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
4. His glorious presence fills our souls, | |||
With songs of loudest praise, | |||
Let all that want a Savior dear, | |||
Their hearts and voices raise. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
5. There's glory, glory in the soul. | |||
It came from heaven above. | |||
Which makes me praise my God so bold, | |||
And his dear children love. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
6. I'll serve the bleeding Lamb of God, | |||
I love his ways so well, | |||
Because his precious blood was spilt | |||
To save my soul from hell. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
7. When weeping Mary came to seek | |||
Her Lord with a perfume, | |||
The napkin and the sheet she found | |||
Together in the tomb. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
8. The angels said, He is not here, | |||
He's risen from the dead; | |||
And streams of grace to sinners flow, | |||
As free as did his blood. | |||
:CHORUS. | |||
From Ingalls' ''Christian Harmony'', 1805}} | |||
{{middle|3}} | |||
{{Text|Simple| | |||
}} | |||
{{bottom}} | |||
[[Category:Folk hymns]] | |||
[[Category:Four-shape note editions]] | |||
[[Category:Sheet music]] | [[Category:Sheet music]] | ||
[[Category:Classical music]] | [[Category:Classical music]] |
Revision as of 13:04, 8 March 2021
Music files
ICON | SOURCE |
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Midi | |
MusicXML | |
File details | |
Help |
- Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2017-05-10). Score information: Letter, 1 page, 73 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: Oval note edition, as written in 1805. Four C. M. D. stanzas with chorus included, as shown below.
- Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2017-05-10). Score information: 7 x 10 inches (landscape), 1 page, 46 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: Note shapes added (4-shape). Four C. M. D. stanzas with chorus included, as shown below.
General Information
Title: Weeping Mary
First Line: Come all ye mourning pilgrims now
Composer: Jeremiah Ingalls
Lyricist: Anonymous
Number of voices: 3vv Voicing: STB
Genre: Sacred Meter: 86. 86. D (C.M.D.), plus chorus (86.86)
Language: English
Instruments: A cappella
First published: 1805 in Ingalls' The Christian Harmony, p. 73, for three voices: Treble-Tenor-Bass
Description: Meter of the music is 86. 86. 86. 86. (C. M. D.) – Ingalls repeated the second couplet to accommodate the chorus. Probably a folk hymn (Jackson 1952, no. 101). Stanza 4 borrowed from an older folk hymn (Jackson 1953b, nos. 47 and 164)
Words by an unknown author, before 1790. The meter of words printed in Ingalls doesn't match his music: probably a misprint, since the words in Hymns and Spiritual Songs for the Use of Christians does fit his music.
Original text and translations
English text Salvation to our King |
Weeping Mary |
|