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Text Identifier:"^o_god_give_ear_unto_my_cry_unto_my$"

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GIVE EAR

Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: C. E. Pollock Incipit: 12333 55432 23423 Used With Text: Give ear, give ear, and to my prayer
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ST CYRIL

Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 11 hymnals Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: Arthur Patton, 1853-1892 Tune Key: G Major Incipit: 32171 23134 32673 Used With Text: O God, give ear unto my cry
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SALZBURG (HAYDN)

Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 82 hymnals Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: Johann Michael Haydn, 1737-1806 Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 13554 33211 17154 Used With Text: O God, give ear unto my cry

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

O God, give ear unto my cry

Hymnal: The Book of Praise #23 (1972) Meter: 8.6.8.6 Topics: Rock; Supplications for Protection Tune Title: EVAN

O, lead me to the Rock that is higher than I

Hymnal: Program and Song Book of the twelfth annual convention of the Young People's Christian Union #d26 (1900) First Line: O God, give ear unto my cry
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O God, give ear unto my cry

Hymnal: The Presbyterian Book of Praise #P40 (1897) Meter: 8.6.8.6 Scripture: Psalm 61:1-5 Languages: English Tune Title: EVAN

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Charles Edward Pollock

1853 - 1928 Person Name: C. E. Pollock Composer of "GIVE EAR" in Bible Songs Charles Edward Pollock USA 1853-1928. Born at Newcastle, PA, he moved to Jefferson City, MO, when age 17. He was a cane maker for C W Allen. He also worked 20 years for the MO Pacific Railroad, as a depot clerk and later as Assistant Roadmaster. He was a musician and prolific songwriter, composing 5000+ songs, mostly used in Sunday school settings and church settings. He took little remuneration for his compositions, preferring they be freely used. He produced three songbooks: “Praises”, “Beauty of praise”, and “Waves of melody”. In 1886 he married Martha (Mattie) Jane Harris, and they had three children: Robert, Edward, and a daughter. He died in Merriam, KS. John Perry ================= Pollock, Charles Edward. (Jefferson City, Missouri, 1853-1924). Records of Jefferson City indicate the following: 1897 clerk at depot; residence at 106 Broadway (with Mildred Pollock) 1904-1905 cane maker for C. W. Allen 1908-1909 musician; residence at 106 Broadway (with wife Matty) 1912-1913 residence at St. Louis Road, east city limits --Wilmer Swope, DNAH Archives Note: not to be confused with Charles Edward Pollock (c.1871-1924).

Arthur Patton

1854 - 1892 Person Name: Arthur Patton, 1853-1892 Composer of "ST CYRIL" in The Irish Presbyterian Hymnbook

Michael Haydn

1737 - 1806 Person Name: Johann Michael Haydn, 1737-1806 Composer of "SALZBURG (HAYDN)" in The Irish Presbyterian Hymnbook Johann Michael Haydn Austria 1737-1806. Born at Rohrau, Austria, the son of a wheelwright and town mayor (a very religious man who also played the harp and was a great influence on his sons' religious thinking), and the younger brother of Franz Joseph Haydn, he became a choirboy in his youth at the Cathedral of St. Stephen in Vienna, as did his brother, Joseph, an exceptional singer. For that reason boys both were taken into the church choir. Michael was a brighter student than Joseph, but was expelled from music school when his voice broke at age 17. The brothers remained close all their lives, and Joseph regarded Michael's religious works superior to his own. Michael played harpsichord, violin, and organ, earning a precarious living as a freelance musician in his early years. In 1757 he became kapellmeister to Archbishop, Sigismund of Grosswardein, in Hungary, and in 1762 concertmaster to Archbishop, Hieronymous of Salzburg, where he remained the rest of his life (over 40 years), also assuming the duties of organist at the Church of St. Peter in Salzburg, presided over by the Benedictines. He also taught violin at the court. He married the court singer, Maria Magdalena Lipp in 1768, daughter of the cathedral choir-master, who was a very pious women, and had such an affect on her husband, trending his inertia and slothfulness into wonderful activity. They had one daughter, Aloysia Josepha, in 1770, but she died within a year. He succeeded Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, an intimate friend, as cathedral organist in 1781. He also taught music to Carl Maria von Weber. His musical reputation was not recognized fully until after World War II. He was a prolific composer of music, considered better than his well-known brother at composing religious works. He produced some 43 symphonies,12 concertos, 21 serenades, 6 quintets, 19 quartets, 10 trio sonatas, 4 due sonatas, 2 solo sonatas, 19 keyboard compositions, 3 ballets, 15 collections of minuets (English and German dances), 15 marches and miscellaneous secular music. He is best known for his religious works (well over 400 pieces), which include 47 antiphons, 5 cantatas, 65 canticles, 130 graduals, 16 hymns, 47 masses, 7 motets, 65 offertories, 7 oratorios, 19 Psalms settings, 2 requiems, and 42 other compositions. He also composed 253 secular vocals of various types. He did not like seeing his works in print, and kept most in manuscript form. He never compiled or cataloged his works, but others did it later, after his death. Lothar Perger catalogued his orchestral works in 1807 and Nikolaus Lang did a biographical sketch in 1808. In 1815 Anton Maria Klafsky cataloged his sacred music. More complete cataloging has been done in the 1980s and 1990s by Charles H Sherman and T Donley Thomas. Several of Michael Haydn's works influenced Mozart. Haydn died at Salzburg, Austria. John Perry