Difference between revisions of "Hosanna (1844)"

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This was an early tune used with [[The Spirit of God]] (probably the first tune used with it).  It was likely also used with [[Now Let Us Rejoice]].  Some suspect this tune is the same tune as ''[[Assembly]]''; the tune ''Hosanna'', however, has yet to be discovered in modern times, and so this remains a mystery.
 
This was an early tune used with [[The Spirit of God]] (probably the first tune used with it).  It was likely also used with [[Now Let Us Rejoice]].  Some suspect this tune is the same tune as ''[[Assembly]]''; the tune ''Hosanna'', however, has yet to be discovered in modern times, and so this remains a mystery.
  
There is a tune called ''[[Hosanna (from the Scottish Hymnal)|Hosanna]]'' referenced in [[The Scottish Hymnal: Hymns for Public Worship, Selected by a Committee of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, 1884]] by [[William Henry Monk]].  However, the poet meter for it does not seem to match that of ''[[The Spirit of God]]''<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=vogzYBv9y0IC&pg=PA42&dq=tune+Hosanna+assembly&as_brr=1</ref>.
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There is a tune called ''[[Hosanna (from the Scottish Hymnal)|Hosanna]]'' referenced in [[The Scottish Hymnal: Hymns for Public Worship, Selected by a Committee of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, 1884]] by [[William Henry Monk]].  However, the poetic meter for it does not seem to match that of ''[[The Spirit of God]]''<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=vogzYBv9y0IC&pg=PA42&dq=tune+Hosanna+assembly&as_brr=1</ref>.
  
 
=References=
 
=References=

Revision as of 01:01, 29 May 2008

This was an early tune used with The Spirit of God (probably the first tune used with it). It was likely also used with Now Let Us Rejoice. Some suspect this tune is the same tune as Assembly; the tune Hosanna, however, has yet to be discovered in modern times, and so this remains a mystery.

There is a tune called Hosanna referenced in The Scottish Hymnal: Hymns for Public Worship, Selected by a Committee of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, 1884 by William Henry Monk. However, the poetic meter for it does not seem to match that of The Spirit of God[1].

References