Difference between revisions of "Hyrum (Beesley)"

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=General Information=
 
=General Information=
*'''Composer''': [[Ebenezer Beesley]]<ref>[http://mormontimes.com/studies_doctrine/church_history/?id=4102 Original <i>Poor Wayfaring Man</i> had different tune, by Tad Walch, Deseret News, Saturday, Oct 11, 2008]</ref> (1840–1906), 1889
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*Composer: [[Unknown Composer]] Probably a folk melody.
 +
*Arranger: [[Ebenezer Beesley]]<ref>[http://mormontimes.com/studies_doctrine/church_history/?id=4102 Original <i>Poor Wayfaring Man</i> had different tune, by Tad Walch, Deseret News, Saturday, Oct 11, 2008]</ref> (1840–1906), 1889
 
**Until recently, the composer had been unknown, although many presumed it was [[George Coles]]; there was considerable doubt that Coles was the composer, however, as a source verifying that he was had yet to be identified, and there were other clues against this idea: The confusion appears to have been started by an assumption that since the tune ''[[Duane Street]]'' was not found to compare with the tune at hand (i.e. [[Hyrum (Man of Grief)|Hyrum]]), and ''Duane Street'' was known to have been associated with ''[[A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief]]'', that perhaps they were the same tune.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=a_tMAI0k_GYC&pg=PA12&dq=%22a+poor+wayfaring+man+of+grief%22&sig=aCGpbcJAhhEwugHKcFvZv78mTaI Stories of Latter Day Saint Hymns Their Authors and Composers, 1939 (p. 12)]</ref>  It has since been discovered that they are ''not'' the same tune.
 
**Until recently, the composer had been unknown, although many presumed it was [[George Coles]]; there was considerable doubt that Coles was the composer, however, as a source verifying that he was had yet to be identified, and there were other clues against this idea: The confusion appears to have been started by an assumption that since the tune ''[[Duane Street]]'' was not found to compare with the tune at hand (i.e. [[Hyrum (Man of Grief)|Hyrum]]), and ''Duane Street'' was known to have been associated with ''[[A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief]]'', that perhaps they were the same tune.<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=a_tMAI0k_GYC&pg=PA12&dq=%22a+poor+wayfaring+man+of+grief%22&sig=aCGpbcJAhhEwugHKcFvZv78mTaI Stories of Latter Day Saint Hymns Their Authors and Composers, 1939 (p. 12)]</ref>  It has since been discovered that they are ''not'' the same tune.
 
***Ebenezer Beesley appears to have liberally adapted this tune from the one that John Taylor did sing before the martyrdom of Joseph Smith Jr.
 
***Ebenezer Beesley appears to have liberally adapted this tune from the one that John Taylor did sing before the martyrdom of Joseph Smith Jr.

Revision as of 23:03, 13 August 2010

Also known as Man of Grief, and, erroneously, Duane Street.

General Information

  • Composer: Unknown Composer Probably a folk melody.
  • Arranger: Ebenezer Beesley[1] (1840–1906), 1889
    • Until recently, the composer had been unknown, although many presumed it was George Coles; there was considerable doubt that Coles was the composer, however, as a source verifying that he was had yet to be identified, and there were other clues against this idea: The confusion appears to have been started by an assumption that since the tune Duane Street was not found to compare with the tune at hand (i.e. Hyrum), and Duane Street was known to have been associated with A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief, that perhaps they were the same tune.[2] It has since been discovered that they are not the same tune.
      • Ebenezer Beesley appears to have liberally adapted this tune from the one that John Taylor did sing before the martyrdom of Joseph Smith Jr.
  • The actual name of this tune has yet to be verified to be anything other than Hyrum, however the Cyberhymnal calls it Man of Grief (without a source, and so perhaps they coined it), and the Latter-day Saints Psalmody, 1889[3] (the earliest known publication of the tune) calls it 'Hyrum' (although there is the possibility that 'Hyrum' was an alternate name for the text, due to its historical use in the church, as one author supposes[4]).

Latter-day Saint Information

Associated Lyrics

References

External Links