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Person Results

Topics:grief+
In:person

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Showing 331 - 340 of 357Results Per Page: 102050

Susan Peck

b. 1960 Person Name: Susan Peck (estadounidense, n. 1960) Topics: Sorrow and Grief Arranger of "SUMÉRGEME" in Las Voces del Camino

Shanti Rasanayagam

Topics: Grief Arranger of "PUNJABI" in The United Methodist Hymnal Shanti Rasanayagam was D. T. Niles' first cousin.

Bill Withers

1938 - 2020 Person Name: Bill Withers, 1938- Topics: Sorrow, Grief, and Loss Author of "Lean on Me" in Singing the Journey

Larry Warkentin

b. 1940 Person Name: Larry Warkentin, 1940- Topics: Grief Composer of "RYAN" in The Covenant Hymnal

Bill Cummings

Topics: Grief, Sorrow Arranger of "[He'll take away all of your heartaches]" in Lead Me, Guide Me (2nd ed.)

Hieronymus Praetorius

1560 - 1629 Person Name: Hieronymus Praetorius, c. 1560-1629 Topics: Grief and Loss Harmonizer of "ALLEIN GOTT IN DER HÖH" in Singing the Living Tradition Hieronymus Praetorius (10 August 1560 – 27 January 1629) was a north German composer and organist of the late Renaissance and very early Baroque eras. He was not related to the much more famous Michael Praetorius, though the Praetorius family had many distinguished musicians throughout the 16th and 17th centuries. He was born in Hamburg, and spent most of his life there. Praetorius studied organ early with his father (Jacob Praetorius, also a composer), afterwards going to Cologne for further study. In 1580 he became organist in Erfurt, but only remained there two years, returning to Hamburg in 1582. Back in Hamburg he worked with his father as assistant organist at St. Jacobi, becoming principal organist in 1586 when his father died. His son, Jacob, was born that same year, and was also destined to become a composer. In 1596 he went to Gröningen where he met Michael Praetorius and Hans Leo Hassler; presumably he became acquainted with their music, and through them the music of the contemporary Italian Venetian School, at this time. He remained in Hamburg as organist at St. Jacobi until his death. Praetorius wrote masses, ten settings of the Magnificat, and numerous motets, mostly in Latin. Most of his music is in the Venetian polychoral style, which uses numerous voices divided into several groups. These compositions are the first to be written in north Germany in the progressive Venetian style. Choir sizes range from 8 to 20, with the voices divided into two, three or four groups, and he must have had well-trained and sophisticated musicians at his disposal, considering both the amount and the difficulty of music he wrote for these ensembles. While progressive in writing in the Venetian style, he was conservative in using Latin and avoiding the basso continuo, which was eagerly adopted by many other contemporary German composers. Most of his vocal music is a cappella. Praetorius was also the first composer to compile a collection of four-part German chorales with organ accompaniment, a sound which was to become a standard in Protestant churches for several centuries. The music in the collection was compiled from four churches in Hamburg; 21 of the 88 settings are of his own composition. Some of his organ compositions survive, including nine settings of the Magnificat, which are in a highly contrapuntal cantus firmus style. In addition to these settings, numerous anonymous pieces in north German collections of the time are now attributed with reasonable certainty to Hieronymus Praetorius. --en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

S. Boddie

Topics: Grief, Sorrow Author of "Just Let Him In" in Lead Me, Guide Me (2nd ed.)

Ysaye M. Barnwell

b. 1946 Person Name: Ysaye M. Barnwell, 1946- Topics: Sorrow, Grief, and Loss Composer of "[Those who have died have never left]" in Singing the Journey

Les Kleen

b. 1942 Person Name: Les Kleen, 1942- Topics: Sorrow, Grief, and Loss Composer of "[We forgive ourselves and each other]" in Singing the Journey

Robert Eller-Isaacs

b. 1951 Person Name: Robert Eller-Isaacs, 1951- Topics: Sorrow, Grief, and Loss Author of "We Begin Again in Love" in Singing the Journey

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