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The Herald Angels Sing" is an English Christmas carol that first appeared in 1739 in the collection Hymns and Sacred Poems. The carol, based on Luke 2:8–14 , tells of an angelic chorus singing praises to God.
He also composed organ music and piano solos such as the Festival March in C. [5] Many of his compositions are of the Victorian parlour music variety. He was a keen writer of high-Victorian hymns, and his hymn tune "Galilee" was widely printed and applied to several texts, although notably "Jesus Calls Us" by Cecil Frances Alexander . [ 14 ]
Part 2, beginning "Vaterland, in deinen Gauen", was later adapted to the words of Charles Wesley’s Christmas carol "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing " (against Wesley's original request, as he had originally wanted more somber music, though he had been long deceased by this point).
This is the audio portion of the audiovideo File:20091104 Joshua Bell, Awadagin Pratt, and Alisa Weilerstein - Mendelssohn's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 49 - 4. Finale, Allegro assai appassionato.ogv Mendelssohn, Felix: Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.mid
"Ständchen" (known in English by its first line "Hark, hark, the lark"), D 889, is a lied for solo voice and piano by Franz Schubert, composed in July 1826 in the village of Währing (now a suburb of Vienna). It is a setting of the "Song" in Act 2, scene 3 of Shakespeare's Cymbeline.
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing arr. for SATB & organ with optional brass & percussion; Hearts of England for tenor, SATB & orchestra (commissioned for the Rugby League World Cup final at Wembley Stadium 2008) I Know The Music for soprano, SATB & strings (commissioned by the Aliquando Choir, Henley based on the unfinished poem by Wilfred Owen)
Hark, a 1985 album by clarinetist Buddy DeFranco, with the Oscar Peterson quartet; Hark! Songs for Christmas - Vol. II, a 2006 album by Sufjan Stevens; Hark! The Village Wait, a 1970 album by the folk rock band Steeleye Span; Hark!, a 1992 album by Richard Stoltzman; Hark! (The Doppelgangaz album), 2013; Hark!
Oppose as to Hark! The herald angels sing. In sentence case that would actually be Hark! the herald angels sing because the exclamation mark was acting as a comma not a full stop. E.g., . Compare also Panic! at the Disco. Better to just use the common all-caps title rather than imply that these are two sentences (and rather than confuse people ...