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A SONG IS BORN
This SectionRevised 4-22-05
The following article appeared in THE HYMN
published by the Hymn Society of America, Jan. 2005
Order: B801 $14.99
A Song is Born; A Collection of Inspiring Hymn Stories
By Robert J. Taylor. Montgomery, TX:
Taylor Publications, 2004. 320 pp. ISBN: 1-932711-00-7.
U. S. $14.95 (www.taylorpublications.com).
Robert J. Taylor is a music minister, for the Woodland
Oaks Church of Christ, who has dedicated himself, since his retirement
from a career in the oil industry in 1986, to improving and preserving
congregational singing. He relates that he started leading singing in Churches
of Christ at the age of ten and has just never stopped. In the last 18
years he has logged more than 300,000 miles in his travels around the United
States searching out the stories behind the hymns that he writes about
in A Song is Born. He calls his approach “Grass Roots Hymnology,” and it
is that kind of dedicated research to which the field of hymnology has
always been indebted.
Most of the 100 hymns surveyed by Taylor in his
book date from the late nineteenth century to the present. There are some
familiar stories of familiar favorites like “Amazing Grace,” “Blest be
the Tie,” “When I survey the Wondrous Cross,” etc., but the primary value
of this collection lies in the information that Taylor has uncovered about
some lesser known hymns, most from the southern gospel tradition. These
range from “Precious Memories” (1925) by Texas J. B. F. Wright to “One
Day at a Time” (1974), a song co-authored by Kris Kristofferson and another
Texan, Marijohn Wilkin. As a native Texan I was impressed with the number
of Texas connections throughout the book, although Taylor assures me that
the emphasis was not planned. As home base of the Stamps Baxter Music Co.,
of course, Texas played an important role in the history of twentieth-century
gospel hymnody. The reader will find this book a treasure trove of new
information about many of these songs. Taylor also emphasizes the most
recent trend in congregational song: the praise and worship song, which
has also found popularity lately in some Churches of Christ. Examples of
this genre include “Like as a Deer,” “Majesty,” and “Awesome God.”
The book is attractively produced in paperback.
For each hymn Taylor includes a four-voice singing version in the seven-shaped
note format still found in many, if not most, Church of Christ songbooks
(Yes, “Awesome God” in shaped notes!). The hymn is followed by a related
passage of scripture and then the story about the hymn and/or its creator(s).
Taylor has included pictures of the hymnists in most cases, another feature
not often found in these collections. As the subtitle suggests, the stories
tend to be of the inspirational variety, but the author’s careful and diligent
research also shines through on every page. For that reason A Song is Born
is recommended to anyone interested in the history of gospel hymnody.
LARRY WOLZ
Larry Wolz is Professor and head of the Department of
Music History and Literature at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas
and book review editor for THE HYMN.
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