Prof. E. O. Excell | |
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by Collins of New York, circa 1890
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Born |
Uniontown, Ohio |
December 13, 1851
Died | June 10, 1921 Wesley Hospital, Chicago, Illinois |
(aged 69)
Resting place | Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago |
Residence | Chicago, Illinois from 1883 |
Education | Studied music under George F. and Frederick W. Root |
Occupation |
Music Publisher Composer Chorister Vocalist |
Employer | E. O. Excell (Company) |
Known for | Leading American hymnbook publisher, Arrangement of Amazing Grace, Gospel songs Count your blessings and I'll Be a Sunbeam |
Spouse(s) | Eliza Jane (Bell) Excell (m. 1871) |
Children | William Alonzo |
Parent(s) | J. J. Excell Emily (Hess) Excell |
Signature | |
Edwin Othello Excell (December 13, 1851 – June 10, 1921), commonly known as E. O. Excell, was a prominent American publisher, composer, song leader, and singer of music for church, Sunday school, and evangelistic meetings during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Some of the significant collaborators in his vocal and publishing work included Sam P. Jones, William E. Biederwolf, Gipsy Smith, Charles Reign Scoville, J. Wilbur Chapman, W. E. M. Hackleman, Charles H. Gabriel and D. B. Towner.
His 1909 stanza selection and arrangement of Amazing Grace became the most widely used and familiar setting of that hymn by the second half of the twentieth century. The influence of his sacred music on American popular culture through revival meetings, religious conventions, circuit chautauquas, and church hymnals was substantial enough by the 1920s to garner a satirical reference by Sinclair Lewis in the novel Elmer Gantry.
Excell compiled or contributed to about ninety secular and sacred song books and is estimated to have written, composed, or arranged more than two thousand of the songs he published. The music publishing business he started in 1881 and that eventually bore his name was the highest volume producer of hymnbooks in America at the time of his death.