That was Sunday, and of course we sang "For All The Saints", which is surely one of my favorite hymns. Then I decided to try to narrow down my Top Ten favorites (not including Christmas carols), and I got so distracted flipping through the hymnal that I completely tuned out the rest of the service
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3. Holy, Holy, Holy (tune: Nicea, John Dykes)
4. For The Beauty Of The Earth (tune: Dix, Conrad Kocher)
Oh, also some of my favorites. Especially For The Beauty Of The Earth.
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Actually, I think the only Christian hymn I actively detest on theological grounds is the second verse of "Jesus Comes With Clouds Descending." But I've always skipped all the Passion-related tunes, which seems like the better part of discretion when you have to organize interfaith stuff.
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I have to say, the United Methodist church that I grew up in had an enormous choir repertoire, but we tended to stick to the same few popular hymns over and over. The UCC church that I go to now has a hymnal that draws on a lot of different traditions: I'm very happy to have learned a bunch of traditional Southern hymns, but not so happy with the number of hymns translated from other languages (especially Spanish) THAT DO NOT RHYME. Dude. Lyrics need to rhyme.
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2. Amazing Grace
3. The one that's to the tune of "Deutschland uber alles" ;-)
4. Simple Gifts
5. Joy To The World
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Oh, good one.
3. The one that's to the tune of "Deutschland uber alles" ;-)
The official hymn name for that tune is actually "Austria": I don't know my Haydn well enough to know whether he originally composed it for some Austrian-themed piece, or if the mysterious people who assign names said "Well, we've already got a "German" and a "Germany", so let's just nudge it over to a neighboring country." *g*
(It's certainly not the winner for greatest number of hymns set to one tune, but it's well up there!)
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I thought about several spirituals, but none of them had the pull of nostalgia behind them, so they didn't make the list. I might have included a few more from Southern Harmony and The Sacred Harp (two 19th century collections of Appalachian hymns) if I could have found links for them; I've only done them as choir anthems, so I can't be sure it's the hymns themselves that I like, and not something added by the arranger.
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"Come Down, O Love Divine" (tune: Down Ampney), and "Dear Lord and Father of Mankind" (words by John Greenleaf Whittier, tune: Repton, Charles H.H. Parry). Although the second is a rather ironic hymn, drawn as it is from a poem which was in part arguing against music in church services.
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