O Lord, the maker of all thing (Anonymous): Difference between revisions

From ChoralWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
(27 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Music files==
==Music files==
{{Legend}}
{{#Legend:}}
 
*{{PostedDate|1999-10-25}} {{CPDLno|354}} [[Media:ws-anon-olo.pdf|{{Pdf}}]] [[Media:Anon-olo.mid|{{mid}}]]
*'''CPDL #354:''' [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/sheet/anon-olo.pdf {{pdf}}]
{{Editor|Christopher Braginetz|1999-10-25}}{{ScoreInfo|Letter|3|160}}{{Copy|CPDL}}
{{Editor|Christopher Braginetz|1999-10-25}}'''Score information:''' 160 kbytes   {{Copy|CPDL}}
:{{EdNotes|A copy of the edition by E. H. Fellowes published by OUP in 1935 and included in OUP's ''A Sixteenth-Century Anthem Book'' (1960).  The Soprano part, which is now missing, was recomposed by Fellowes. Fellowes chose to ignore the original music for verse 3 (i.e. from 'O Father, through thy blessed Son' onwwards), preferring instead to repeat the music of verse 2. A revised edition, re-transcribed from the original source and using all the original music, was published by OUP in 1991.}}
:'''Edition notes:'''  


==General Information==
==General Information==
'''Title:''' ''O Lord, the Maker of All Thing''<br>
{{Title|''O Lord, the Maker of All Thing''}}
{{Composer|Anonymous}}
{{Composer|Anonymous}}


{{Voicing|4|SATB}}<br>
{{Voicing|4|SATB}}
'''Genre:''' {{pcat|Sacred| music}}, [[:Category:Anthems|Anthems]] <br>
{{Genre|Sacred|Anthems}}
{{Language|English}}
{{Language|English}}
'''Instruments:''' <br>
{{Instruments|A cappella}}
'''Published:'''  
{{Pub|1|1935}}
 
{{Descr|A setting of a text from the ''King's Primer'' of 1545 based on the Compline hymn ''Te lucis ante terminum''. The first bar (mistranscribed in Fellowes's edition and further in CPDL #00354) was taken from the plainsong hymn ''Christe qui lux es et dies'', for Compline in Lent.}}
'''Description:'''  
{{#ExtWeb:}}
 
'''External websites:'''


==Original text and translations==
==Original text and translations==
{{Text|English}}
{{LinkText|O Lord, the maker of all thing}}
<poem>
O Lord, the maker of all thing,
We pray Thee now in this evening
Us to defend through Thy mercy
From all deceit of our enemy.
Let neither us deluded be,
Good Lord, with dream or fantasy;
Our hearts waking in Thee Thou keep
That we in sin fall not on sleep.
O father, through Thy blessed Son,
Grant us this our petition,
To whom, with the Holy Ghost alwaies,
In heaven and earth be laud and praise.
</poem>


[[Category:Sheet music]]
[[Category:Sheet music]]
[[Category:Anthems]]
[[Category:Renaissance music]]
[[Category:Renaissance music]]

Latest revision as of 22:05, 29 November 2023

Music files

L E G E N D Disclaimer How to download
ICON SOURCE
Icon_pdf.gif Pdf
Icon_snd.gif Midi
File details.gif File details
Question.gif Help
  • (Posted 1999-10-25)  CPDL #00354:     
Editor: Christopher Braginetz (submitted 1999-10-25).   Score information: Letter, 3 pages, 160 kB   Copyright: CPDL
Edition notes: A copy of the edition by E. H. Fellowes published by OUP in 1935 and included in OUP's A Sixteenth-Century Anthem Book (1960). The Soprano part, which is now missing, was recomposed by Fellowes. Fellowes chose to ignore the original music for verse 3 (i.e. from 'O Father, through thy blessed Son' onwwards), preferring instead to repeat the music of verse 2. A revised edition, re-transcribed from the original source and using all the original music, was published by OUP in 1991.

General Information

Title: O Lord, the Maker of All Thing
Composer: Anonymous

Number of voices: 4vv   Voicing: SATB
Genre: SacredAnthem

Language: English
Instruments: A cappella

First published: 1935
Description: A setting of a text from the King's Primer of 1545 based on the Compline hymn Te lucis ante terminum. The first bar (mistranscribed in Fellowes's edition and further in CPDL #00354) was taken from the plainsong hymn Christe qui lux es et dies, for Compline in Lent.

External websites:

Original text and translations

Original text and translations may be found at O Lord, the maker of all thing.