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The Psalms of David

Trinity Sunday at Westminster Abbey

Be Still My Soul - The Ultimate Hymns ...

The English Hymn 2 – Jerusalem the G...

Biography

George Elvey is best known for his hymn tunes, particularly for two that are still widely used in Christian services today: Diademata (Crown Him with many crowns) and St. George's Windsor (Come, ye thankful people, come). He set many other texts, including "Come, ye lofty" and "Pilgrimage," and he also composed oratorios, songs, anthems, and other music for church services, most of it long forgotten, however. Elvey was an arch-conservative, writing music that looked backward a half century or more, showing the influence of Handel and rejecting most modern trends. None of his large works are performed or recorded today, but some of his hymn tunes are regularly heard in church service and appear on recorded collections of hymns and sacred music. Hyperion, Decca, Priory, and a few other labels have issued recordings containing some of his more popular efforts. George Elvey was born into a musical family on March 27, 1816, in Canterbury, England. He served as a boy chorister in Canterbury Cathedral and quickly advanced, taking on more prominent singing parts in the church services there. Elvey later studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London. In 1835 he was appointed organist and chorus master at St. George's Chapel, Windsor. Having just turned 19, Elvey now held a highly coveted post, but then he was already a celebrity of sorts, having written the anthem Bow downe thine ear in 1834, which was awarded the prestigious Gresham Prize. Elvey held his post at St. George's for 47 years. During his tenure there, he improved the chorus, expanded the repertory, and wrote a spate of compositions, mostly for church service. Elvey soon became a popular figure in the highest circles in English society: in 1837 he was appointed organist to the Queen and thereafter was a regular at royal gatherings. Yet, he had not yet obtained his bachelor's degree; that would come in 1838 at Oxford and his doctorate in 1840. Elvey was often selected to provide music for royal occasions, such as the funeral of Queen Adelaide in 1849 and the wedding of Princess Louise in 1871, for which he composed his once-popular Festival March. It was for that work that Elvey was knighted in 1871. Throughout most of his career Elvey also taught organ and violin. He retired from St. George's in 1882 and died in Windlesham, Surrey, in 1893.