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Instrumental Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.818236

By Stephen R Dalrymple. By Ralph E Hudson & Isaac Watts. Arranged by Stephen R Dalrymple (Dalrymple Designs). Sacred. Individual part. 10 pages. Stephen R Dalrymple #3098369. Published by Stephen R Dalrymple (A0.818236).

At the Cross (Watts and Hudson)

♫ by Isaac Watts (lyrics – 1701, refrain added by Ralph E. Hudson / music - HUDSON by Ralph E. Hudson 1855

♫ arranged for piano solo Stephen R Dalrymple

♫ Isaac Watt’s lyrics have been sung to at least 4 tunes in the 300 plus years since he wrote them.

♫ I used some deliberate dissonance in the piano solo arrangement to follow the mood of the text. Although ‘At the Cross’ is usually sung with gusto, I kept the first several choruses simple and quiet to contemplate the wonder of the cross and the incredible effect it has in changing lives.

♫ music © 1999 (copyright registered in 'Great God of Wonders, Sacred piano Arrangements.’)

♫ recording ℗ 2021 Stephen R Dalrymple 

♫ presentation © 2024 Stephen R Dalrymple 

♫ performed by the arranger

♫ This .pdf file includes 2 files: 1) Letter size piano score 2) Small page piano score for performing from a 10 inch tablet

♫ (Tell your computer which pages you want to print. There are programs online that will allow you to split pdf files so that you can choose the correct part of the pdf for your tablet.)

♫ YouTube Channel: @DalrympleDesigns.

At the Cross (Watts and Hudson) arranged for piano solo by Stephen R Dalrymple
Piano seul
Stephen R Dalrymple
$4.50 4.23 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 4 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.818229

By Stephen R Dalrymple. By Isaac Watts and Lowell Mason (from George Frederick Handel). Arranged by Stephen R Dalrymple (Dalrymple Designs). Christmas. Score. 14 pages. Stephen R Dalrymple #3087649. Published by Stephen R Dalrymple (A0.818229).

Joy to the World with The Hallelujah Chorus
♫ piano solo arrangement by Stephen R Dalrymple
♫ based on the public domain hymn by Isaac Watts and Lowell Mason (from George Frederick Handel)
♫ Isaac Watts published the lyrics in 1719. We credit Isaac Watts for helping to popularize “hymns†over “Psalms†in Protestant churches in the 18th Century. The texts of “Psalms†came directly from the Bible; “hymns†were more interpretive and reflective. Whether to allow the use of hymns rather than Psalms in church was a controversial topic of the 17th and 18th centuries!
♫ Watts used Psalm 96 and 98 with Genesis 3 to create the lyrics of Joy to the World. For over a hundred years, the lyrics were sung to various Psalm tunes.
♫ Lowell Mason published our current version with the melody ANTIOCH in 1848. He attributed the melody to George Frederick Handel by Lowell. We can find several fragments of this melody in Handel’s music, there is no complete statement of the melody in Handel. And so ANTIOCH is now attributed to Mason.
♫ The Hallelujah Chorus serves as the introduction and the conclusion of this arrangement. It was first published within Messiah, an oratorio by George Frederick Handel in 1741. The lyrics were created by Charles Jennens from the King James Bible.
♫ “The Lord is come†is the present perfect tense. It seems archaic, yet the present perfect tense has a distinct meaning. It points to a current action that is sustained. It isn’t just that Christ came in the past. But that Christ came and is still here with us.
♫ music © 2017 (copyright registered in 'I See your Glory’ collection)
♫ recording ℗ 2020 Stephen R Dalrymple
♫ presentation © 2022 Stephen R Dalrymple
♫ performed by the composer
♫ This .pdf file includes 2 files: 1) Letter size piano score 2) Small page piano score for performing from a 10 inch tablet
♫ (Tell your computer which pages you want to print. There are programs online that will allow you to split pdf files so that you can choose the correct part of the pdf for your tablet.)
♫ A duplicate YouTube video in English is available under the title Joie dans le monde https://youtu.be/QrcR5GaKzW4
♫ @DalrympleDesigns.

Joy to the World with the Hallelujah Chorus
Piano seul
Stephen R Dalrymple
$4.50 4.23 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.565707

By Sharon Wilson. By Isaac Watts. Arranged by Sharon Wilson. Christmas,Folk,Multicultural,Sacred,World. Score. 2 pages. Sharon Wilson #5765533. Published by Sharon Wilson (A0.565707).

Piano Solo - Level 3 - Digital Download

SKU: A0.972672

Composed by James Siddons. Christian,Concert,Contemporary,Easter. Score. 17 pages. James Siddons Music and Writings #6671707. Published by James Siddons Music and Writings (A0.972672).

Sonata Hymnica No. 5 has the subtitle Scenes of Calvary. Landscape paintings and printed illustrations of the Cross of Calvary were ubiquitous in Christian literature in the late 19th century, so it not surprising that allusions to such art are found in the texts of hymns. The three hymns heard in Sonata Hymnica No. 5 all evoke some sense of seeing, in a spiritual way, the scene of the Crucifixion.

Sonata Hymnica No. 5 opens with a sturdy and rugged statement of When I Survey the Wond’rous Cross, written by Isaac Watts in 1707. This poem continues:

On which the Prince of Glory dy’d,

. . . See from His Head, his Hands, his Feet,

Sorrow and Love flow mingled down!

 

In the United States, music educator Lowell Mason (1792-1872) composed a tune in 1824 for singing Watts’ hymn. Named HAMBURG tune, it was an adapted form of some Gregorian chant in Church Mode I. This combination of poem and tune became very popular; so much so, that by the 1880s, elaborations of it appeared in print. The most enduring is the pairing of Watts’ poem and Mason’s tune with a simple camp meeting song, At the Cross, to be a refrain. It has the phrases, At the cross, where I first saw the light . . . It was there by faith I received my sight.

The centerpiece of Sonata Hymnica No. 5 is the tune TOPLADY, the usual tune for singing Rock of Ages. This tune was composed in 1830 by Thomas Hastings (1784-1872), an associate of Lowell Mason in New York. He wrote hymns and hymn tunes, published hymnals, and worked tirelessly to elevate choral singing in churches. Hastings indicated that he intended his tune for singing Rock of Ages by naming it after the author of the hymn-poem, the English pastor Augustus Toplady (1740-1778). The Rev. A. B. Grosart wrote in a memorial that Toplady was no poet or inspired singer, but an impulsive, rash-spoken, reckless preacher who could nonetheless picture vanishing gleams of imaginative light in his hymnic verses. A better impression was gained by poet A. C. Benson (1862-1925), who, upon hearing Rock of Ages sung at William Gladstone’s funeral at Westminster Abbey in 1898 --- a rare State funeral attended by several members of the British Royal family --- wrote, To have written such words which should come home to people in moments of high, deep, and passionate emotion  . . . there can hardly be anything worth doing better than that. This high compliment came from the poet who, a few years later, would write the words of Elgar’s Coronation Ode for King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.

A camp meeting song, a rash-spoken English pastor, two American music educators, a State funeral at Westminster Abbey --- such is the wide world of influence and inspiration of these three Scenes of Calvary.


Sonata Hymnica No. 5
Piano seul

$9.50 8.94 € Piano seul PDF SheetMusicPlus


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