George J. Webb

From ChoralWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Alias: George James Webb

Life

Born: 26 September 1803

Died: 7 October 1887

Biography

George James Webb was born at Rushmore Lodge, near Salisbury in Wiltshire, England. He trained early in England and was an organist in Falmouth, England. He emigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, in 1830. He was organist at the Old South Church in Boston for nearly 40 years and was organist at the Boston Church of the New Jerusalem. With Lowell Mason, he founded the Boston Academy of Music. He was president of the Handel and Haydn Society. In 1871, he left Boston, taught in New York from 1876-1885, and retired to Orange, New Jersey. He was an editor for the journals “The Music Library” and “The Music Cabinet.” He published the books “Vocal Techniques” and “Voice Culture,” and was editor and arranger of the collections “Young Ladies’ Vocal Class Book,” “The Glee Hive,” “The New Odeon,” “The Vocalist,” the “Little Songster,” and “Cantica Laudis.” He composed organ music, choral music, songs, and hymns. His most well-known composition is his part-song “’Tis Dawn, the Lark is Singing.” The original song was well received and later adapted as a hymn with the addition of sacred words “Stand up, stand up for Jesus.”

View the Wikipedia article on George J. Webb.

List of choral works

Sacred Works

Hymn Tunes

Anthems

Other Sacred works

No works currently available

Secular works

Arrangements by George J. Webb

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

  • Scripture and Worship (1834)

External links

add web links here