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ADD: Blessed Quietness DigiTrad: BLESSED QUIETNESS WHITBY FISHERMAN |
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Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: GUEST,Daniel Hersh Date: 06 Jun 24 - 04:03 AM Hi, Joe! Yes, same melody. Amidons give Lucy Simpson as their source in their YouTube description. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: Tattie Bogle Date: 26 May 24 - 07:42 PM A wee postscript to what Joe said in 2020 about Beggar’s Velvet: it’s true that they no longer perform as a quartet, but Dave Webber and Annie Fentiman are still out there as a duo. |
Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: Joe Offer Date: 20 May 24 - 09:11 PM Nice to see you here, Daniel. Isn't that the same as this melody from the Amidons? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITPLPEHUzmA Oh, yes, here's Lucy singing it on Sharon Mountain Harmony: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxqoIbGUrg8 |
Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: GUEST,Daniel Hersh Date: 20 May 24 - 08:16 PM And here's the sheet music that has that tune: https://hymnary.org/hymn/SLP41897/139 html links repaired ---mudelf |
Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: GUEST,Daniel Hersh Date: 20 May 24 - 07:54 PM If anyone (20+ years later!) is still trying to find out where Lucy Simpson got the tune she sang, here's what she wrote in the booklet of the album: "Blessed Quietness" was collected for me by my subconscious in the summer of 1975. I was attending my first Folk Music Week at Pinewoods Camp in Plymouth Massachusetts, and had reached the fifth day of frantic feasting on classes, workshops, concerts, all-night singing, and non-stop tunes drifting through the woods as musicians practiced, swapped, and jammed. I had hardly slept a wink and was definitely on the verge of collapse. I tried to nap in my cabin, but was over-stimulated and unable to relax. Reaching for something to read (I had brought only songbooks), I started to learn "Blessed Quietness." I didn't notice until the next day how exactly appropriate it was to the situation. It has been my favorite hymn since then. The hymnal was The Golden Trumpet, published by the Christi Witness Co. of Chicago. No date of publication is given, but the song copyrights range from 1882 to 1906. Mrs. Manie Payne Ferguson is cited as writer of the words, and William J. Kirkpatrick is credited for the music. I've seen it in other hymn books with another (far less satisfying) tune. (L.S.) The full LP liner notes and booklet are at https://folkways-media.si.edu/docs/folkways/artwork/FLG00086-LP.pdf . |
Subject: RE: ADD: Blessed Quietness From: Joe Offer Date: 23 Aug 20 - 08:21 PM BLESSED QUIETNESS (words rewritten by Jerry Praver, 2013) 1. Joys are flowing like a river since new harmony has come It abides with us forever, makes the trusting heart its home CHORUS Blessed quiet (quietness) ness, holy quiet (quietness) ness, What assurance in my soul On the stormy (stormy) sea, speaking peace to (peace to) me, How the billows cease to roll. 2. Like the gentle rain from heaven, like the sunlight from the sky; Understanding will be given, falling on us by and by. 3. See the fruitful field is growing, blessed fruits of happiness And the streams of life are flowing in the lonely wilderness 4. What a wondrous contemplation, which we thoroughly embrace What a peaceful habitation, what a quiet resting place Bev sings melody starting on Bb, Jerry sings harmony starting on F. Arrangement stolen from Beggars Velvet, an outstanding UK group made up of Cathy & Charley Yarvvood and Dave Webber & Anni Fentiman. Beggar's Velvet stopped performing in 1993. Beggars' Velvet version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohu4JFcQVlc was written by Manie P. Ferguson (words) and William S. Marshall (music). Here's a more traditional arrangement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr5nW0T07ww |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Haruo Date: 17 Dec 00 - 08:54 PM Sorry for confusing the two of you ;-) |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Snuffy Date: 17 Dec 00 - 06:22 PM That's the tune I know in England - we sang it at Bedworth folk fest a couple of weeks ago, but of course a L - O - T slower than the DT tempo. Wassail! V |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Haruo Date: 17 Dec 00 - 05:54 PM So Liz, is the tune (uncredited as to authorship, alas) in the Digitrad the one you're used to singing the text to in England? Liland |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: dick greenhaus Date: 15 Dec 00 - 07:30 PM Hey Liz- It is in DigiTrad----maybe he's driving you batty for some other reason. |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Liz the Squeak Date: 14 Dec 00 - 07:46 PM Thakn heaven someone has posted the words, Micca has been driving me batty with this for a week! LTS |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: GUEST,Old Snap Date: 14 Dec 00 - 03:56 AM Thanks again to everyone who has tried to help, but I still can't find the source of the tune normally sung in England. The tune on the Cyber Hymnal is the American one which occurs in the 1898 hymnbook. I believe the tune recorded by Lucy Simpson is the English one, since Beggar's Velvet credit her on the sleeve notes to their version, so thanks for that lead, Sandy. But does anyone know where she got it from or who wrote it? David |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Haruo Date: 07 Dec 00 - 10:10 PM Is the tune you're familiar with the one in The Cyber Hymnal or not? Liland |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Sandy Paton Date: 07 Dec 00 - 01:10 AM Lucy Simpson leads it on Folk-Legacy's "Sharon Mountain Harmony" - cassette with booklet, C-86 - along with a lot of other fine gospel songs. Sandy |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: radriano Date: 06 Dec 00 - 06:44 PM Here's the way Mudcatter Riggy does it: Blessed Quietness Joys are flowing like a river Since the comforter has come He abides with us forever Make the trusting heart his home Chorus: Blesses quietness, holy quietness What assurance in my soul On the stormy seas, speaking peace to me How the billows cease to roll Like the fallin' rain from Heaven Like the sunlight from the sky So the Holy Ghost is given Fallin' on us from on high See a fruitful field is growing Blessed fruits of righteousness And the streams of life are flowing In the lonely wilderness What a wonderful salvation Where we always see His face What a peaceful habitation What a quiet resting place Joys are flowing like a river Since the comforter has come He abides with us forever Make the trusting heart his home Richard |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Burke Date: 06 Dec 00 - 05:49 PM Since some of your request was in the old thread, I'm taking the liberty of repeating it here.
As for "Blessed Quietness", I've tracked it back to an American Seventh Day Adventist song book of about 1898, but that gives a different tune to the one known in England and beautifully recorded by Beggar's Velvet a few years back. Does anyone have any idea where the English version of the tune came from? I don't have much idea either. Are the versions you found under Brendy's link the same as in the hymnal or what you're looking for? Is there a recording out there on the WEB somewhere that we could listen to? There's a book used in the UK that seems to just get referred to a Sankey. I don't know the title, but I've been told it's a good source for this type of stuff. Sankey was from the US, but his UK book had lots of good hymns he could not include in his US publications due to copyright restrictions. In those days copyright was not reciprocal so things copyrighted here could be freely copied there. (Don't quote me on any of this, it's just what I've been told) |
Subject: RE: Help: Blessed Quietness From: Brendy Date: 05 Dec 00 - 09:51 AM I wouldn't know where to start looking through this, but if you Click - here - there are a few different snippets of information at the google.com site. B. |
Subject: Blessed Quietness From: GUEST,Old Snap Date: 05 Dec 00 - 03:52 AM Sorry I seem to have lost my thread, as it were, so I've started a new one! Thanks to all of you who gave me the source of July Wakes, but I haven't had much luck with Blessed Quietness. I've tracked it back to an American Seventh Day Adventist hymn book of about 1898, but there it has a different tune to the one we're familiar with in England (and, incidentally, an additional second verse). Does anyone know where the English tune came from, and when? David Robertson |
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