Search Results

Text Identifier:"^have_mercy_on_me_o_god_accord_grail2010$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Texts

text icon
Text authorities

Parce Domine (Spare Us, Gracious Lord) (Ten Piedad, Señor)

Author: Ronald F. Krisman Appears in 22 hymnals First Line: Have mercy on me, O God, According to your merciful love (Misericordia, Dios) Text Sources: English verses: The Revised Grail Psalms

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities

[Be merciful, O Lord, for we have sinned]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Patricia Craig; Joseph Gelineau, SJ; Chrysogonus Waddell, OCSO Tune Key: a minor Used With Text: Psalm 51: Have Mercy, Lord

PARCE DOMINE

Appears in 13 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Robert LeBlanc, b. 1948 Tune Sources: Mode I with Tonus Peregrinus Tune Key: d minor Incipit: 55544 35554 43333 Used With Text: Parce Dómine (Spare Us, Gracious Lord)

[Have mercy, Lord]

Appears in 5 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Joseph Gelineau, SJ; Chrysogonus Waddell, OCSO; Joseph Gelineau, SJ Tune Key: C Major Incipit: 13217 65 Used With Text: Psalm 51: Have Mercy, Lord

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Psalm 51: Have Mercy, Lord

Hymnal: RitualSong (2nd ed.) #62a (2016) First Line: Have mercy on me, O God Refrain First Line: Have mercy, Lord Scripture: Psalm 51 Languages: English Tune Title: [Have mercy, Lord]

Psalm 51

Hymnal: Worship (4th ed.) #55a (2011) First Line: Have mercy on me, O God Refrain First Line: Have mercy, Lord cleanse me from all my sins Scripture: Psalm 51 Languages: English Tune Title: [Have mercy, Lord cleanse me from all my sins]

Psalm 51: Have Mercy, Lord

Hymnal: RitualSong (2nd ed.) #62b (2016) First Line: Have mercy on me, O God Refrain First Line: Be merciful, O Lord Scripture: Psalm 51 Languages: English Tune Title: [Be merciful, O Lord]

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Joseph Gelineau

1920 - 2008 Person Name: Joseph Gelineau, SJ Composer (Antiphon and Tone) of "[Have mercy, Lord]" in Oramos Cantando = We Pray In Song Joseph Gelineau (1920-2008) Gelineau's translation and musical settings of the psalms have achieved nearly universal usage in the Christian church of the Western world. These psalms faithfully recapture the Hebrew poetic structure and images. To accommodate this structure his psalm tones were designed to express the asymmetrical three-line/four-line design of the psalm texts. He collaborated with R. Tournay and R. Schwab and reworked the Jerusalem Bible Psalter. Their joint effort produced the Psautier de la Bible de Jerusalem and recording Psaumes, which won the Gran Prix de L' Academie Charles Cros in 1953. The musical settings followed four years later. Shortly after, the Gregorian Institute of America published Twenty-four Psalms and Canticles, which was the premier issue of his psalms in the United States. Certainly, his text and his settings have provided a feasible and beautiful solution to the singing of the psalms that the 1963 reforms envisioned. Parishes, their cantors, and choirs were well-equipped to sing the psalms when they embarked on the Gelineau psalmody. Gelineau was active in liturgical development from the very time of his ordination in 1951. He taught at the Institut Catholique de Paris and was active in several movements leading toward Vatican II. His influence in the United States as well in Europe (he was one of the founding organizers of Universa Laus, the international church music association) is as far reaching as it is broad. Proof of that is the number of times "My shepherd is the Lord" has been reprinted and reprinted in numerous funeral worship leaflets, collections, and hymnals. His prolific career includes hundreds of compositions ranging from litanies to responsories. His setting of Psalm 106/107, "The Love of the Lord," for assembly, organ, and orchestra premiéred at the 1989 National Association of Pastoral Musicians convention in Long Beach, California. --www.giamusic.com

Gregory Murray

1905 - 1992 Person Name: A. Gregory Murray Author (Antiphon) of "Psalm 51" in Worship (4th ed.)

Michael Joncas

b. 1951 Composer (refrain) of "[A sacrifice you accept, O God]" in Gather (3rd ed.)