SO beautiful! Thank you so much! HOW wonderful, to see CHILDREN singing, tackling this most-difficult-yet-most-magnificent of all God's hymns! This is magnificent, I can't thank you enough. God bless you, all.
Hi Billy, at Psalm sings we sometimes do a selection of verses on the longer songs for convenience and to save voices a bit. It's possible we'll record the full song in the future! Thanks for watching.
This version is forcing it into a standard time signature. The original in the Anglican Hymnbook is an irregular. You've done in it in pretty strict 3/4 time. I also consider it too fast.
@@joefrescoln Well that sent me down the internet rabbit hole. Book of Common Praise 1938. Threre are two tunes for it, neither is marked "irregular". Accept my apologies. The version I remember using is hymn 812a in that edition. Tune by C Villiers Stanford. Not sure which hymn I was conflating it with. Perhaps, "I vow to thee my country" which uses the middle chunk of Holst's Jupiter movement from the planets. Once again, My Bad.
Beautiful people, beautiful song!
You guys need to drop an album on Spotify
SO beautiful! Thank you so much! HOW wonderful, to see CHILDREN singing, tackling this most-difficult-yet-most-magnificent of all God's hymns! This is magnificent, I can't thank you enough. God bless you, all.
We have 8 baptisms this coming Lord's day at our church! As is our custom we will be singing this wonderful hymn!
Amen and amen 😊😊😊
All Glory be to God! I love when y’all post these! Thank you from Breaux Bridge, Louisiana.
Thank you!
beautiful
Great song
By far my favorite version. I much prefer the peppier tempo.
Fantastic! But where’s the rest of the song
Hi Billy, at Psalm sings we sometimes do a selection of verses on the longer songs for convenience and to save voices a bit. It's possible we'll record the full song in the future! Thanks for watching.
This version is forcing it into a standard time signature. The original in the Anglican Hymnbook is an irregular. You've done in it in pretty strict 3/4 time.
I also consider it too fast.
Which Anglican hymnbook?
@@joefrescoln Well that sent me down the internet rabbit hole. Book of Common Praise 1938. Threre are two tunes for it, neither is marked "irregular". Accept my apologies.
The version I remember using is hymn 812a in that edition. Tune by C Villiers Stanford.
Not sure which hymn I was conflating it with. Perhaps, "I vow to thee my country" which uses the middle chunk of Holst's Jupiter movement from the planets.
Once again, My Bad.
@@SherwoodBotsford No problem at all. I was just curious. There is something odd about the timing.
I love it at this tempo. It lends a sense of the triumphant, otherwise it can sometimes sound like a dirge