Lexicographical Neighbors of Fuguing
Literary usage of Fuguing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Sabbath in Puritan New England by Alice Morse Earle (1891)
"An old inhabitant of Roxbury remembered that when fuguing tunes were introduced
into his church " they produced a literally fuguing effect on the older ..."
2. History of American Music by William Lines Hubbard (1908)
"From the singing schools it was adopted by the choirs and thus came to take the
place previously occupied by the more simple hymn-tunes. The fuguing music ..."
3. The American History and Encyclopedia of Music by Janet M. Green, Josephine Thrall (1908)
"The fuguing music seems to have made a profound impression when it first came
into use, and William Billings is found voicing its praises in the following ..."
4. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1893)
""Stir up this stu — stir up this stu " was only the fuguing form of " Stir up
this stupid heart to pray." And so with " And take thy pil — and take thy ..."
5. A History of Music in New England: With Biographical Sketches of Reformers by George Hood (1846)
"This work contained the first music of a fuguing style ever published in this
country. Not quite one half of the psalm-tunes were of the plain choral style, ..."
6. The Christian Remembrancer by William Scott (1847)
"From this habit of fuguing, it has been necessary to publish the words of the
anthems. ' A good Protestant ought to be convinced ' that what was sung was ..."
7. Writings of Levi Woodbury, LL. D.: Political, Judicial and Literary by Levi Woodbury (1852)
"Effect these, and then this whole rubbish of incoherent sounds, ill adapted words,
fuguing and counter-fuguing is proscribed. ..."