When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hark! The Herald Angels Sing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hark!_The_Herald_Angels_Sing

    The original hymn text was written as a "Hymn for Christmas-Day" by Charles Wesley, included in the 1739 John Wesley collection Hymns and Sacred Poems. [4] The first stanza (verse) describes the announcement of Jesus's birth. Wesley's original hymn began with the opening line "Hark how all the Welkin rings".

  3. Hymnal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymnal

    A hymnal or hymnary is a collection of hymns, usually in the form of a book, called a hymnbook (or hymn book). They are used in congregational singing . A hymnal may contain only hymn texts (normal for most hymnals for most centuries of Christian history); written melodies are extra, and more recently harmony parts have also been provided.

  4. Hymn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymn

    A writer of hymns is known as a hymnodist, and the practice of singing hymns is called hymnody; the same word is used for the collectivity of hymns belonging to a particular denomination or period (e.g. "nineteenth century Methodist hymnody" would mean the body of hymns written and/or used by Methodists in the 19th century). [26]

  5. Hymnology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymnology

    Hymnology (from Greek ὕμνος hymnos, "song of praise" and -λογία -logia, "study of") is the scholarly study of religious song, or the hymn, in its many aspects, with particular focus on choral and congregational song. It may be more or less clearly distinguished from hymnody, the creation and practice of

  6. Hymn tune - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymn_tune

    [15] Luther also adapted the music of existing plainsong melodies as hymn tunes. Families enjoyed singing hymns in parts in their homes, for the family's enjoyment and edification, but unison singing was the custom in church. [16] The Reformed Church and the (French) Genevan Psalter were the result of work by John Calvin (1509–1564). His ...

  7. Lining out - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lining_out

    Lining out or hymn lining, called precenting the line in Scotland, is a form of a cappella hymn-singing or hymnody in which a leader, often called the clerk or precentor, gives each line of a hymn tune as it is to be sung, usually in a chanted form giving or suggesting the tune.

  8. Hymnody of continental Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymnody_of_continental_Europe

    The sources of Christian music are the Jewish tradition of psalm singing, and the music of Hellenistic late antiquity. Paul the Apostle mentions psalms, hymns and sacred songs (Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16) but only in connection with the Christian behavior of the Christians, not with regard to worship music.

  9. Angels We Have Heard on High - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angels_We_Have_Heard_on_High

    The music was attributed to "W. M.". According to some websites, [ 4 ] the hymn is by the nineteenth-century Wilfrid Moreau from Poitiers. "Angels We Have Heard on High" was an 1862 paraphrase by James Chadwick [ citation needed ] , the Roman Catholic Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle , in the north-east of England.