400
700
900
The Missouri Harmony, Or, A Collection Of Psalm And Hymn Tunes, And Anthems
Carden, Allen D.

The Missouri Harmony, Or, A Collection Of Psalm And Hymn Tunes, And Anthems

an introduction to the grounds and rudiments of music

University of Nebraska Press (1994)
9780803261143
40 pages
LC Classification M2117 .M67 1994
LC Control No. 93041235/M

Subject

  • Choruses, Sacred (Mixed Voices), Unaccompanied
  • Hymns, English - United States
  • Shape-note Hymnals
  • Tune-books

Plot

The Missouri Harmony was the most popular of all frontier tunebooks, with a history going back to 1820, when singing master Allen Carden introduced it into his St. Louis school. The 185 selections in The Missouri Harmony, compiled from earlier tunebooks, were old favorites used in churches and singing schools which sometimes convened in taverns. Abraham Lincoln and his sweetheart, Ann Rutledge, are said to have sung from The Missouri Harmony at her father's tavern in New Salem, Illinois. Shirley Bean points out in her introduction the importance of tunebooks and frontier singing schools in teaching Americans to read music. The Missouri Harmony, continuing the European tradition of shaped notes, contained the largest collection of compositions for congregations and choirs. Carden included thirty-seven fuguing tunes, among them "Lenox" and "Sherburne." The Supplement, added in the seventh edition in 1835, contains twenty-three hymn tunes, four choral numbers, a sacred song, and a duet; Isaac Watts was the author of most of the texts. This Bison Book edition duplicates the 1846 reprint of the popular ninth edition, which first came out in 1840. Shirley Bean's introduction provides a historical framework that will be welcomed not only by scholars but also by the modern shape-note singing community.

Personal

Owner MD
Read
Index 399
Added Date Sep 24, 2015 20:34:46
Modified Date Mar 27, 2024 12:14:38