Saybrook (William Billings)

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  • (Posted 2023-12-05)  CPDL #77862:  • Round notes:         • Four-shape notes:      
Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2023-12-05).   Score information: Letter, 1 page, 63 kB   Copyright: CPDL
Edition notes: Transcribed from Massachusetts Historical Society Ms. S-290, ca. 1790, as Dunstable, with meter 86. 86. (C. M.) and words "Methinks I see my Savior dear".
  • (Posted 2015-04-23)  CPDL #35185:       
Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2015-04-23).   Score information: Letter, 1 page, 66 kB   Copyright: Public Domain
Edition notes: Transcribed from Music in Miniature, 1779; words as suggested by Nathan, 1979. Oval note edition. All four stanzas included.
  • (Posted 2015-04-23)  CPDL #35184:     
Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2015-04-23).   Score information: 7 x 10 in (landscape), 1 page, 60 kB   Copyright: Public Domain
Edition notes: Transcribed from Music in Miniature, 1779; words as suggested by Nathan, 1979. Note shapes added (4-shape). All four stanzas included.

General Information

Title: Saybrook
First Line: My God, what inward grief I feel
Composer: William Billings
Lyricist: Anonymous

Number of voices: 4vv   Voicing: SATB
Genre: SacredPsalm-tune   Meter: 88. 88 (L.M.) (1779) Meter: 86. 86 (C.M.) (ca. 1790)

Language: English
Instruments: A cappella

First published: 1779 in Music in Miniature, no. 69
    Manuscript ca. 1790 as Dunstable in Massachusetts Historical Society Ms. S-290, no. 3
Description: First published in Music In Miniature, 1779, p. 30, without words. It was considerably amended by Billings ca. 1790 as Dunstable, reducing the meter to 86. 86. (C. M.) (very different from Billings' Dunstable of 1770 ff.). The manuscript has words "Methinks I see me Savior dear," a stanza later used by Billings in 1794 for part of the words to his "St. Thomas", a different tune. Words to the 1779 L. M. tune were later chosen by Nathan (1979): Isaac Watts, 1719, paraphrase of Psalm 139.

External websites:

Original text and translations

Original text and translations may be found at St. Thomas (William Billings) and Psalm 139.