Dunlap's Creek (S. McFarland): Difference between revisions
(First line) |
m (Meter) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
{{Lyricist|Isaac Watts}}<br> | {{Lyricist|Isaac Watts}}<br> | ||
{{Voicing|4|SATB|TrCoTB}} | {{Voicing|4|SATB|TrCoTB}} | ||
{{Genre|Sacred|Folk hymns|Hymn tunes}} | {{Genre|Sacred|Folk hymns|Hymn tunes}} {{Meter|86. 86 (C.M.)}} | ||
{{Language|English}} | {{Language|English}} | ||
{{Instruments|A cappella}} | {{Instruments|A cappella}} |
Revision as of 02:15, 16 March 2022
It has been suggested that this page or section be merged with For thy blest saints, a noble throng (Freeman Lewis). |
Music files
ICON | SOURCE |
---|---|
Midi | |
MusicXML | |
Capella | |
MuseScore3 | |
File details | |
Help |
- Editor: Richard Mix (submitted 2021-06-10). Score information: Letter, 1 page, 28 kB Copyright: CPDL
- Edition notes: For STB. Four verses of "We walk by faith, and not by sight", by Henry Alford. From Southern Harmony, 1854
General Information
Title: Dunlap's Creek
First Line: Think, O my soul, the dreadful day
Composer: S. McFarland
Lyricist: Isaac Watts
Number of voices: 4vv Voicing: TrCoTB
Genre: Sacred, Folk hymn, Hymn tune Meter: 86. 86 (C.M.)
Language: English
Instruments: A cappella
First published: 1814 without attribution in The Beauties of Harmony, Edition 1
2nd published: 1816 attributed to "S. M'Farland" in The Beauties of Harmony, Edition 2
3rd published: 1820 in Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony (Ananias Davisson), Edition 1
4th published: 1831 in The Virginia Harmony (Clayton and Carrell), p. 16
5th published: 1832 in Compilation of Genuine Church Music, p. 63
6th published: 1848 in Hesperian Harp
7th published: 1846 in Southern and Western Pocket Harmonist
8th published: 1854 in Southern Harmony, no. 276a
Description: An American folk hymn from the early 19th century. Originally published in Lewis (1814-1816) for four voices, Treble-Counter-Tenor-Bass; Davisson (1830) copied McFarland's four-part arrangement. Clayton and Carrell (1831) reduced this to three parts, Treble-Tenor-Bass; they kept McFarland's Tenor and Bass but wrote a new Treble part. Funk (1832) also reduced it to three parts, but used McFarland's Treble, Tenor, and Bass. Hauser (1848) copied McFarland's original music, for four parts. Walker (1846 and following) used the same three-part reduction as Funk. All these versions were published in shapenote format (4-shape).
Words originally published in 1814 are Think, O my soul, the dreadful day by Isaac Watts, 1709, Hymns and Spiritual Songs, Hymn 62 of Book 2, the fourth of six stanzas; these words were also used in Virginia Harmony (1831). Davisson (1820) used different Isaac Watts words from Book 2, Hymn 65, When I can read my title clear. Funk (1832) used the same Watts hymn as McFarland, but the first stanza, Sing to the Lord, ye heavenly hosts. Hauser (1848) used the same words as Funk. Walker (1846 and following) used another Watts hymn from Book 2, Hymn 94, My God, my portion and my love.
External websites:
Original text and translations
Original text and translations may be found at Sing to the Lord, ye heavenly hosts, When I can read my title clear, My God, my portion, and my love, and We walk by faith, and not by sight.
- Merge requests
- Richard Mix editions
- STB
- 3-part choral music
- First Lines (English)
- S. McFarland compositions
- SATB
- 4-part choral music
- Sacred music
- Folk hymns
- Hymn tunes
- 86. 86 (C.M.)
- Works in English
- A cappella
- 1814 works
- Works in Edition 1
- 1816 works
- Works in Edition 2
- 1820 works
- 1831 works
- 1832 works
- 1848 works
- 1846 works
- 1854 works
- Sheet music
- Romantic music