Jacob Kimball: Difference between revisions
(New work entry: Middleton) |
(New work entry: Middleton) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Recent_additions}} | {{Recent_additions}} | ||
*{{NoCo|Middleton}} | |||
*{{NoCo|Middleton}} | *{{NoCo|Middleton}} | ||
*{{NoCo|Middleton}} | *{{NoCo|Middleton}} |
Revision as of 03:03, 12 August 2017
The next work entry has been recently added automatically. Users are invited to check it and, if necessary, correct and move it to the appropriate position in the page. If the work list on this composer page is automated already (see Automating the work list on composer pages) the work entry should be already automatically shown at the appropriate position, so you can just delete the next line. You can also consider to automate the work list on this composer page if not automated already. Remove also the line(s) written {{Recent additions}} when done.
Life
Born: 15 February 1761, Topsfield, Massachusetts
Died: 6 February 1826, Topsfield, Massachusetts
Biography
Jacob Kimball, Jr., was a fifer and drummer in the Revolutionary War. After graduating from Harvard College, he was a lawyer and schoolteacher for a few years, then returned to Topsfield and returned to being a singing-master and poet. He compiled two tunebooks, Rural Harmony and Essex Harmony, mostly of his own compositions. His music shows signs of his reformist ideas (Steel and Hulan 2010). There are noticeable European influences on his harmonic expression, especially tending towards "modern" harmonies and the psalmody of the seventeenth century.
View the Wikipedia article on Jacob Kimball.
List of choral works
A. Listed by Title
1. Psalm-Tunes
2. Anthems and Set-Pieces
B. Listed by First Line
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL
Publications
- Kimball, Jacob. 1793. The Rural Harmony, Being an Original Composition in Three and Four Parts, For the Use of Music Schools and Musical Societies. Boston, Massachusetts: Isaiah Thomas and Ebenezer T. Andrews. 112 pp.
- Kimball, Jacob. 1800. The Essex Harmony: An Original Composition, in Three and Four Parts. Exeter, New Hampshire: Henry Ranlet. 112 pp. "Part 2", 1802.