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Old 100th
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==In other works== <!-- date order --> *''Voluntary on the Old Hundredth'' β also called ''The 100th Psalm tune. Set as a Lesson''. This is an organ piece using the psalm tune as a theme, not unlike a [[chorale prelude]], and was meant for church use. Authorship is somewhat dubious, the piece was either written by [[John Blow]] or his student [[Henry Purcell]]. * "Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir", a hymn in twelve stanzas by [[Paul Eber]] after [[Philipp Melanchthon]]'s "[[Dicimus grates tibi]]", for [[Michaelmas]], is sung to the same tune ([[Johannes Zahn|Zahn]] No. 368). [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] harmonized this hymn in the [[Chorale cantata (Bach)|chorale cantata]] [[Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir, BWV 130|BWV 130]], and in the [[List of chorale harmonisations by Johann Sebastian Bach|four-part chorales]] BWV 326 and BWV 327.<ref>[[Uwe Wolf (musicologist)|Uwe Wolf]] (editor), Henry S. Drinker (translator). "Foreword", p. 4 in [https://www.carus-verlag.com/en/choir/sacred-choral-music/johann-sebastian-bach-herr-gott-dich-loben-alle-wir-oxid-7.html?redirected=1 ''Johann Sebastian Bach: Herr Gott, dich loben alle wir (Lord God, we praise thee all of us) BWV 130'' (Partitur/Full score).] Carus, 2015</ref><ref>Luke Dahn. [http://www.bach-chorales.com/BWV0130_6.htm BWV 130.6] at {{url|bach-chorales.com}}(2017)</ref> *[[Hubert Parry]] β ''Three Chorale Fantasias'' is based on the Old 100th.<!-- date ? died 1918 --> *[[Virgil Thomson]] β quoted in several movements of his score for ''[[The Plow that Broke the Plains]]'' (1936). *[[Paul Hindemith]] β quoted in his ''[[Trauermusik]]'' (January 1936).<ref>[[Michael Steinberg (music critic)|Michael Steinberg]], [https://books.google.com/books?id=t8oXNX2tY8AC&dq=werner+reinhart&pg=PA213 ''The Concerto'']</ref> *[[Benjamin Britten]] β 1948 cantata [[St. Nicolas (Britten)|St Nicolas]] *[[David Maslanka]] β Symphony No. 4 *[[Frank Ticheli]] β Angels in the Architecture *[[Felix Mendelssohn]] β Piano Trio in C minor Op 66, 4th movement Finale *[[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] β The Old 100th Psalm Tune ("All people that on earth do dwell") β originally composed for the 1953 coronation of Queen Elizabeth II; with a brass fanfare and borrowing a [[fauxbourdon]] setting by [[John Dowland]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Old Hundredth Psalm Tune: All People that on Earth do Dwell |url=https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-old-hundredth-psalm-tune-9780193547216?cc=us&lang=en&# |publisher=Oxford University Press |access-date=28 April 2020 |date=31 March 1969|isbn = 978-0-19-354721-6}}</ref> *The 1893 song "[[The Volunteer Organist]]" by [[George Spaulding]] features the Old Hundredth in its refrain - it is played by the piano and is harmonised to an original vocal melody. *In [[The Adventures of Tom Sawyer]] by [[Mark Twain]], the congregation sings "Old Hundredth" (called "Old Hundred" here) to celebrate the reappearance of [[Tom Sawyer]], [[Huck Finn]] and Joe Harper at the funeral service being held for them after they had gone missing and were presumed dead. *[[Patrick O'Brian]] makes frequent reference to it in his [[AubreyβMaturin series]] of historical fiction novels, as being one of the traditional hymns sung by the sailors on Sundays.<ref>The Hundred Days, p.111 (Vol. Book 19) (Aubrey/Maturin Novels) By Patrick O'Brian</ref> "Old Hundred" was the first work transmitted by telephone during Graham Bell first demo at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (Boston, May 10, 1876).<ref>Robert V. Bruce, Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude, Cornell University Press, 1973, p.189.</ref>
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