Melodic Snippets Index

Find and filter melodies in the Brébeuf Hymnal

Page 741

“Behold Our Lord Transfigured” by Fr. Christopher G. Phillips
Second Tune: “King’s Lynn” • 76 76 D

76 76 D
Page 742

“Behold Our Lord Transfigured” by Fr. Christopher G. Phillips
Third Tune: “Crüger” • 76 76 D

76 76 D
Page 743

“Behold Our Lord Transfigured” by Fr. Christopher G. Phillips
Text only—can be used with any 76 76 D

76 76 D
Page 729

“O Jesus Christ, Remember” by Fr. Edward Caswall, Oratorian
Tune: “Aurelia” • 76 76 D

76 76 D
Page 698

“Come, Ye Faithful, Raise The Strain”
Saint John Damascene; translated into English by Dr. John M. Neale
Tune: “Ave Virgo Virginum” • 76 76 D

76 76 D
Page 709

Discendi, Amor Santo (“Come down, O love divine”)
Bianco da Siena; translated from Italian by Richard Frederick Littledale.
Tune: “Down Ampney” • 6 6 11 D

6 6 11 D
Page 697

Victimae Paschali Laudes (“Christ the Lord is risen today”)
Wipo of Burgundy, Chaplain to Emperor Conrad II; translated into English by Jane Elizabeth Leeson
Tune: “Paschal Lamb” • 77 77 D

77 77 D
Page 678

Stille Nacht (“Silent Night, Holy Night”)
This German text was composed by Fr. Josef Mohr, a Catholic priest who died in 1848. He should not be confused with a Jesuit priest, Fr. Josef Hermann Mohr (d. 1892), who published many German hymnals. The English translation (“Silent Night”) was composed by John Freeman Young.
Tune: “Stille Nacht” • 66 88 66

66 88 66
Page 681

“Songs Of Thankfulness And Praise” by Christopher Wordsworth
Tune: “St George” • 77 77 D
“The Epiphany—a cardinal feast—commemorates three manifestations of Christ’s divinity: the visit of the Wise men, our Lord ’s Baptism, and the miracle at Cana.”—Fr. Adrian Fortescue

77 77 D
Page 667

Quem Vidistis Pastores? Dicite (“Angels we have heard on high”)
Translation: Most Rev’d James Chadwick, Bishop of Hexham
Tune: “Gloria” • 77 77 R

77 77 R
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