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Three King Strut

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€ 79,00

Product ID: BM1 31544
By John Henry Hopkins Jr.

Publisher:
Belwin Mills
Arranger:
Johnson
Series:
Belwin Intermediate Full Orchestra
Line Up:
Symphony Orchestra
Duration:
4:00
Level: 2,5

Set & Score


This item is in stock

About this item

This flexible arrangement is the perfect introduction to full orchestra music for your ensemble. The piece begins with a traditional statement of “We Three Kings” using lush harmonies and a flowing melody, then quickly segues into a hip, cool style in 4/4 time that young players love to play! Designed to be very accessible for the wind students, the piece can be put together with minimal wind rehearsals. Students and audiences alike will love this upbeat and catchy tune! Playable by strings alone or with the addition of any number of winds.


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Three King Strut
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Composer
John Henry Hopkins Jr. (1820-1891)

John Henry Hopkins, Jr. (October 28, 1820 – August 14, 1891) was an American clergyman and hymnist, most famous for composing the song "We Three Kings of Orient Are" in 1857. Hopkins was born in Pittsburgh, the son of John Henry Hopkins, an Episcopal bishop. Hopkins graduated from the University of Vermont with an A.B. in 1839, and then a Master's Degree in 1845.[1] After a stint as a journalist, he graduated from the General Theological Seminary in 1850, and became a deacon, author, illustrator, and designer.[2] He was the seminary's first music teacher from 1855 to 1857, composed several hymns, and edited the Church Journal. He wrote words and music to his most famous hymn, "We Three Kings", as part of a Christmas pageant for his nephews and nieces. It is suggested to have been written in 1857 but did not appear in print until his Carols, Hymns and Song in 1863] He is credited with the music for "I Sing a Song of the Saints of God", a popular children's hymn in the Episcopal Church. He became an ordained priest in the Episcopal Church in the year 1872, eventually following in his father's footsteps to become the Episcopal Bishop of Vermont.. He delivered the eulogy at the funeral of President Ulysses S Grant in 1885, and died in Hudson, New York. He was buried next to his father at Bi­shop's House, Rock Point, Burlington, Vermont. Hopkin's nephew, Charles Filkins Sweet, wrote a biography of his uncle entitled "A Champion of the Cross, Being the Life of John Henry Hopkins, S.T.D."
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