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Text Identifier:"^we_who_live_by_sound_and_symbol$"

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We who live by sound and symbol

Author: Graham Maule Appears in 2 hymnals

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CHARTRES

Meter: 8.7.8.7 D Appears in 13 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: George Black (1931-) Tune Sources: French trad. Tune Key: e minor Incipit: 11552 34472 34231 Used With Text: We Who Live by Sound and Symbol
Audio

ABBOT'S LEIGH

Appears in 170 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Cyril Vincent Taylor Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 53111 76655 34565 Used With Text: The hand of heaven

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

We Who Live by Sound and Symbol

Author: Graham Maule (1958-) Hymnal: Common Praise (1998) #69 (1998) Meter: 8.7.8.7 D Topics: Eucharist; Eucharist Scripture: Matthew 26:26-29 Languages: English Tune Title: CHARTRES

The hand of heaven

Author: John L. Bell; Graham Maule Hymnal: Iona Abbey Music Book #46 (2003) First Line: We, who live by sound and symbol Languages: English Tune Title: ABBOT'S LEIGH

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John L. Bell

b. 1949 Author of "The hand of heaven" in Iona Abbey Music Book John Bell (b. 1949) was born in the Scottish town of Kilmarnock in Ayrshire, intending to be a music teacher when he felt the call to the ministry. But in frustration with his classes, he did volunteer work in a deprived neighborhood in London for a time and also served for two years as an associate pastor at the English Reformed Church in Amsterdam. After graduating he worked for five years as a youth pastor for the Church of Scotland, serving a large region that included about 500 churches. He then took a similar position with the Iona Community, and with his colleague Graham Maule, began to broaden the youth ministry to focus on renewal of the church’s worship. His approach soon turned to composing songs within the identifiable traditions of hymnody that began to address concerns missing from the current Scottish hymnal: "I discovered that seldom did our hymns represent the plight of poor people to God. There was nothing that dealt with unemployment, nothing that dealt with living in a multicultural society and feeling disenfranchised. There was nothing about child abuse…,that reflected concern for the developing world, nothing that helped see ourselves as brothers and sisters to those who are suffering from poverty or persecution." [from an interview in Reformed Worship (March 1993)] That concern not only led to writing many songs, but increasingly to introducing them internationally in many conferences, while also gathering songs from around the world. He was convener for the fourth edition of the Church of Scotland’s Church Hymnary (2005), a very different collection from the previous 1973 edition. His books, The Singing Thing and The Singing Thing Too, as well as the many collections of songs and worship resources produced by John Bell—some together with other members of the Iona Community’s “Wild Goose Resource Group,” —are available in North America from GIA Publications. Emily Brink

Cyril Taylor

1907 - 1991 Person Name: Cyril Vincent Taylor Composer of "ABBOT'S LEIGH" in Iona Abbey Music Book Cyril V. Taylor (b. Wigan, Lancashire, England, 1907; d. Petersfield, England, 1991) was a chorister at Magdalen College School, Oxford, and studied at Christ Church, Oxford, and Westcott House, Cambridge. Ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1932, he served the church as both pastor and musician. His positions included being a producer in the religious broadcasting department of the BBC (1939­-1953), chaplain of the Royal School of Church Music (1953-1958), vicar of Cerne Abbas in Dorsetshire (1958-1969), and precentor of Salisbury Cathedral (1969-1975). He contributed twenty hymn tunes to the BBC Hymn Book (1951), which he edited, and other tunes to the Methodist Hymns and Psalms (1983). He also edited 100 Hymns for Today (1969) and More Hymns for Today (1980). Writer of the booklet Hymns for Today Discussed (1984), Taylor was chairman of the Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland from 1975 to 1980. Bert Polman

Graham Maule

1958 - 2019 Author of "The hand of heaven" in Iona Abbey Music Book
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