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The 23 Easter hymns included on this album from organist and harpsichordist William Neil will get you in the spirit faster than you can say "Thine is the Glory" (which happens to be Track 22!).
You Christians, sing in great joy Christoph Moufang: from Paris 1623 German 1865 based on O filii et filiae "Lasst uns erfreuen" Let us rejoice anon. German 1623 "O Licht der wunderbaren Nacht" O light of the wonderful night Georg Thurmair: from Mainz, c. 1390 German 1963 "Seht, er lebt" Look, he lives Lothar Zenetti: from Israel German 1973
[1] [2] Its uplifting melody and repeated "Alleluias" make this a favourite Anglo-Catholic hymn during the Easter season, the Feast of All Saints, and other times of great rejoicing. The hymn was also notably adapted for the final movement of The Company of Heaven (1937), a cantata by Benjamin Britten .
Come, Holy Ghost; Come, Lord, and Tarry Not; Come My Way, My Truth, My Life; Come, rejoice Before Your Maker; Come, Thou Holy Spirit, Come; Come To Me; Come To My Mercy; Come, Ye Faithful, Raise the Strain; Comfort, Comfort Ye My People; Conditor alme siderum; Creator of the Earth and Skies; Creator Spirit, By Whose Aid; Crown Him With Many ...
The original carol was published in 1894 in Carols for Easter and Ascensiontide, a publication put together by Woodward and Wood. They published it subsequently in 1902 in The Cowley Carol Book (second edition) and again in the Cambridge Carol Book of 1910. [1] [2] The music has been republished many times, often under choral arrangements.
The Paschal Hours are the form in which the Little Hours are chanted on Pascha (Easter) and throughout Bright Week in the Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine Catholic churches. Specifically, the Paschal Hours replace: Compline; The Midnight Office; The First Hour; The Third and Sixth Hours; The Ninth Hour
The Five Mystical Songs are a musical composition by English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958), written between 1906 and 1911. [1] The work sets four poems ("Easter" divided into two parts) by seventeenth-century Welsh poet and Anglican priest George Herbert (1593–1633), from his 1633 collection The Temple: Sacred Poems.
The song was released on April 2, 2021, [1] as the second single from his eighth studio album, Hymn of Heaven (2021). [2] Wickham co-wrote the song with Jonathan Smith. [3] Jonathan Smith produced the single. "House of the Lord" peaked at number one on the US Hot Christian Songs chart. [4]