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Singt dem König Freudenpsalmen

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"Singt dem König Freudenpsalmen"
Christianhymn
1783Salzburg text[a]
EnglishSing psalms of joy to the King
OccasionPalm Sunday
Textanonymous
LanguageGerman
Melodyanonymous
Published1783 (1783)Salzburg

"Singt dem König Freudenpsalmen" (Sing psalms of joy to the King) is a Catholichymn in German forPalm Sunday. It was first printed without a creator's name of text or melody in Salzburg in 1783. In further editions, the text was often edited and connected to other melodies. The song is part of the 2013 Catholic hymnalGotteslob as GL 280 with a melody from theDiocese of Cologne.

History

[edit]

The liturgy forPalm Sunday processions suggested the antiphon "Gloria, laus et honor" byTheodulf of Orléans. In 18th-century Austria, this and other songs of the liturgy were often used in German translations, such as "Lob und Ehre sei dir [de]" in a 1775 hymnal from Vienna which remains close to the Latin model."Singt dem König Freudenpsalmen", published in Salzburg in 1783, is different from the model, both in content as in a refrain to end each stanza:

"Jesu, König, göttlicher!
Dir sey Glory, Preis und Ehr.

The refrain was omitted in many later versions. The hymn was first printed,[1] with a new melody,[2] in the second part of a collection of songs and devotions,Der heilige Gesang zum Gottesdienste in der römisch-katholischen Kirche, inSalzburg in 1783. The song is entitled: "Triumphlied am Palmsonntage" (Song of triump on Palm Sunday). The table of content lists the song as "Kirchenlied am Palmsonntag nach der Palmweyhe bey der Proceßion";[3] recommending it to be sung after the consecration of the palms.

During the 19th century, the hymn became part of many hymnals of regions and dioceses, often with textual variants and other melodies. In the1975 first edition of theGotteslob, the song appeared in regional sections, but was missing in the common section, because the regional versions differed too much. The song became part of the common section in the 2013Gotteslob, but some regions also retained their specific local variant, such as "Sion, singe Jubelpsalmen" as GL 770 in theDiocese of Münster.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^In the 4th stanza, the word "Singt" is missing but is present in thecorresponding print with melody

References

[edit]
  1. ^First print of the text
  2. ^1783 melody
  3. ^Table of content

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toSingt dem König Freudenpsalmen.
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