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Tune Identifier:"^cantate_gilbert$"

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CANTATE

Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 with alleluia Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Walter Bond Gilbert Tune Key: E Major Incipit: 55565 45351 17654

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To Him Who for our sins was slain

Appears in 56 hymnals Used With Tune: CANTATE

Instances

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To Him Who for our sins was slain

Hymnal: Songs for the Lord's House #141 (1880) Languages: English Tune Title: CANTATE
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To him who for our sins was slain

Hymnal: Hymnal and Canticles of the Protestant Episcopal Church with Music (Gilbert & Goodrich) #109 (1883) Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 with alleluia Languages: English Tune Title: CANTATE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Walter Bond Gilbert

1829 - 1910 Person Name: W. B. Gilbert Composer of "CANTATE" in Songs for the Lord's House Walter Bond Gilbert DMus United Kingdom 1829-1910. Born at Exeter, Devon, England, he studied music under Alfred Angel, Samuel Wesley and Henry Bishop. He attended New College, Oxford and the University of Toronto, Canada. He was organist in Devon at Topsham in 1847, Bideford in 1849, Kent at Tonbridge in 1854, Old Colliegiate Church, Maidstone in 1859, Lee in 1866, Boston, Lincolnshirein 1868, and Trinity Chapel in New York City in 1869-1897. He taught music at Tonbridge School, helped found the College of Organists, edited the America Episcopal Hymnal, and wrote a number of monographs, including “Antiquities of Maidstone”. He continued to write church music, producing services, oratorios (including “The Restoration of Israel and St. John, 1857), organ works, and anthems. He died at Headington, Oxford, England. John Perry
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