🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£22.75
Out of Stock

A Functional Art

Reflections of a Hymn Writer

By (author) Timothy Dudley-Smith
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom
Published: 6th Apr 2017
Dimensions: w 140mm h 231mm d 9mm
Weight: 315g
ISBN-10: 0193408716
ISBN-13: 9780193408715
Barcode No: 9780193408715
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
One of the finest and most influential hymn-writers of our age, Timothy Dudley-Smith has published around 400 hymn texts. In this fascinating book, the author explores not only the writing of hymns but many other aspects including the study and singing of them. It is not a history, a text book, or an academic treatise, but the personal reflections of an experienced practitioner who has been speaking and writing on this subject, on both sides of the Atlantic, for more than fifty years. His armchair reflections draw freely on the writings of others, and in a discursive, almost conversational, style.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
[The back cover copy of this book] is a wholly inadequate description of one of the most important volumes about hymns and hymn-writing ever. For the avoidance of all doubt, I recommend it very highly indeed to anyone involved in hymns and planning Divine Worship . . . this is an author with a sharp perception of the place of music in worship and the effect music can have on words . . . Throughout this gripping volume there is constant reference,
always in context, to other writers, not just on hymns, but on poetry and the technicalities of writing. The book is worth buying just for the chapter entitled 'Rhyme and Metre'. . . I cannot recommend this volume too highly. It is to hymns and hymnody what Bishop John Vernon Taylor's book The Go Between God is to the
understanding of the place of The Holy Spirit in Christian Mission. * Barry Williams, Laudate (The Guild of Church Musicians), September 2017 * [Dudley-Smith] writes with concision and humour, bearing the weight of a lifetime's appreciation of prose and poetry lightly and accessibly ... I am very grateful for this book - and hope that it can guide and shape poets in service of the body for many years to come. * Mark Meynel, Churchman * This book is a treasure trove. Few other people can set a lifetime of appreciating and, eventually, writing good hymns alongside wide-ranging insights about worship, history, theology, poetry and language, all topped off with appropriate dollops of music hall and doggerel that slip seamlessly into the narrative . . . the book is an enjoyable and educational guided walk with a most engaging expert who wears his learning lightly . . . beginning hymn writers will find
invaluable help and encouragement to hone their skills . . . there are insights for people who choose hymns in worship but have never wondered what makes a good hymn in an appropriate place, while people who know their way round hymns will find new perspectives. And, at times, it does not just inspire
you, it makes you smile. * Rosalind Brown, Canon Librarian of Durham Cathedral, Praxis, June 2017 * Timothy Dudley-Smith celebrated his 90th birthday last December; rather than cutting back on his output, [he's produced] this outstanding collection of essays. If 'essays' sounds academic, these reflections are far from that - at times one feels as if in conversation with the author . . . Timothy Dudley-Smith has read widely, thought profoundly and clearly prayed intensely about hymnody. He has also listened to other voices to whom he gives considerable space; the
range of quotations from other authors is remarkable and enlivens the writing. Whether one sees him as a major voice towards the end of a great tradition a a sort-of Sibelius in the symphonic tradition - or someone who helps to reinvigorate and show the way forward for a tradition still with a glorious
future, this book should be essential reading for everyone concerned with hymnody. * Julian Elloway, Church Music Quarterly, June 2017 * In this elegantly written and thoughtful book, he [Timothy Dudley-Smith] reflects on what he describes as the 'functional art' of the hymn-writer . . . This is very much the work of a literary man . . . Substantial chapters explore such literary themes as content and form, meaning and language, and rhyme and metre . . . He proposes an interesting set of qualities as the marks of a good hymn: heartfelt, biblical, simple, deep, and uncontroversial . . . There is much
here to enjoy in the author's rich compendium of personal anecdotes and reminiscences, quotations and reflections. There is also much to ponder in his discussion of the future of the hymn . . . As long as there are people like Tim Dudley-Smith still writing hymns that are both recognisably traditional
and contemporary, there is surely a future for this particular 'functional art'. * Ian Bradley, Church Times, 21 July 2017 * What a delight to read this book by Timothy Dudley-Smith who is rightly acclaimed as one of the finest and most influential hymn writers of our time . . . He disarmingly claims that it is not a work of scholarship or even originality; but this is to underestimate the wealth of research which permeates every page . . . It is to be hoped that A Functional Art will now be introduced to a more general readership of all those who are involved in the business of
liturgy and Christian witness, especially worship leaders, church musicians, writers, editors and broadcasters. Indeed, anyone with more than a passing interest in the technicalities of writing, especially in verse form, will find this to be an invaluable source of inspiration and information. A Functional
Art should be a required text for all 'creative writing' courses! * Ian Sharp, Hymn Society Bulletin, Summer 2017 * . . . the hymns that Dudley-Smith cites . . . will do much to deepen and develop faith in the hearts and minds of those who use them, sing them and pray them. * Philip Mounstephen, Anvil: Journal of Theology and Mission, Vol. 34, issue 1, May 2018 *