Amanda Husberg

Amanda Husberg (born 1940 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American composer of hymns.

Education

She received her B.S. in Education in 1962, from Concordia Teachers College, in Seward, Nebraska where she majored in Organ, studying with Jan Bender. She taught elementary school for two years at Redeemer Lutheran School in Westfield, New Jersey before going to Brooklyn to do parish work. She received her M.S. in Early Childhood Education from Hunter College in New York City.[1]

Career

Before her retirement, Husberg worked for thirty-six years as a Director in one of the 450 New York City publicly funded day care centers.

For 50 years she has been the Director of Music at St. John the Evangelist Lutheran Church, now a multicultural congregation in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn.[2] On June 10, 2000 she was presented with the SERVANT OF CHRIST award from the Atlantic District of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod for her contribution to the greater church in the field of music, specifically in the area of hymns/congregational song.

Composing

Husberg has 190 hymn tunes published in the United States, Canada, Brazil, the U.K, and China. Her hymns are in hymnals and supplements published by a variety of publishers and denominations, including the popular Methodist supplement, The Faith We Sing, which also includes her most popular tune, Jennings-Houston, now published in six different hymnals and supplements,[3] including Lutheran Worship. She has written two liturgical masses, one of which, The Brooklyn Mass, is currently being used at her church. She also has several choral pieces published.

Her own book of 47 tunes to new texts (including 8 of her own) When You Pass Through the Waters, was published by Wayne Leupold Editions, Inc., in 2005.[4] A new collection of 70 tunes was published in 2012 with texts by Lutheran poet and hymn text writer, Gracia Grindal. The texts and tunes cover Lectionary year B, New Testament readings. She has also composed 15 psalm songs for 2 part choir with refrains for the congregation, texts by Richard Leach. Both parts have instrumental descants. This Psalter was published by Concordia Publishing House in 2012. In 2013, Concordia Publishing House published a second Psalter book in the series. In 2014 the third book of the series was published.

When Husberg first came to St. John’s Church, it was entirely African-American. Through the years she has played spirituals, jazz, gospel, and a variety of other styles of music, from Johann Sebastian Bach to Andraé Crouch. All this is reflected in the variety of styles she writes in for her hymns, with a special love of early American pentatonic music and gospel music.

She is a member of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada and credits them with nurturing her hymn writing efforts.[5] She writes for congregational singing, believing that we do sing with one voice, young and old, people of all walks of life, new singers and experienced singers. Together we sing praise to the One who accepts all our praise, no matter how beautiful it is, or how humble it may be. She is also a member of the American Composers Forum, the Assoc. of Lutheran Church Musicians, and ASCAP, from which she has received yearly Awards since 2001.

The Requiem Mass for Terrance Lindall

Husberg has completed a resurrection requiem mass "A Feast Prepared", written at the request of Terrance Lindall, a renowned artist of Lutheran upbringing whose illustrations for John Milton's Paradise Lost are the most famous of the 20th century for the subject. The text of the requiem mass is new, and written by Lutheran sacred poet and hymn writer, Richard Leach. The Requiem was premiered in Elizabethtown, KY the weekend of March 5 and 6, 2011. According to the composer Amanda, it definitely stands as "the answer to Paradise Lost."

What people have said about the requiem:

"One can compare it to a road which leads the believing soul to the final Resurrection banquet, to join all of Christ's disciples in thankfulness, joy and triumph." D. Sida Hodoroaba-Roberts, The Elizabethtown Area Sacred Community Choir (Kentucky)

"It is with great joy that I hear this wonderful requiem! It will continue to give me faith, comfort and inspiration!" Terrance Lindall

Terrance Lindall painted her into his Paradise Lost Altarpiece to honor her and Richard Leach for their efforts on the requiem. A signed and dedicated copy of the requiem is in the collection of the Yuko Nii Foundation and the renowned Robert J. Wickenheiser Milton collection along with full sized Giclee prints of the altarpiece signed by Lindall.

Published work

Notes

  1. http://www.hopepublishing.com/html/main.isx?sub=307&search=44
  2. http://www.sjebrooklyn.org/staff.html
  3. Husberg, Amanda; Richard Leach: Come and Hear the Blessing, Abingdon Press, 2005, cover copy
  4. https://www.wayneleupold.com/frameset.asp?section=congregational_song.html
  5. Husberg, Amanda: When You Pass Through the Waters, Wayne Leupold Editions, Inc., 2005, p. vi

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.