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A Staid British Hymn Crosses the Atlantic and Becomes a Rollicking American Folk Favorite

  What started out as a beautiful but, as far as I’m concerned, a little stuffy, hymn for the Christian church feast day of Epiphany, written by the Anglican bishop Reginald Heber and published in 1811, underwent a sea change after it voyaged to America. It acquired a new tune via the shape-note tradition that was developed in the mid-1830’s and became especially popular in Appalachia. (You can read a bit about shape-note singing in my post A Rich American Tradition in “Hark! I Hear the Harps Eternal”) It also acquired a new first verse, with the original first verse ... Read more

The post A Staid British Hymn Crosses the Atlantic and Becomes a Rollicking American Folk Favorite appeared first on Behind the Music.



This post first appeared on Intentional Living, please read the originial post: here

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A Staid British Hymn Crosses the Atlantic and Becomes a Rollicking American Folk Favorite

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