Where familiar hymns meet their makers. Tunes shaped worship across centuries. James T. Lightwood's Hymn-Tunes and Their Story is an engaging, concise account of hymn tune history that traces the origins of hymn tunes from early folk airs, through parish usage, to their adoption in cathedral liturgy. Equal parts sacred music anthology and practical church music collection, Lightwood clarifies how melody and metre married text to create the Christian worship songs congregations still sing. Clear descriptions, historical anecdotes and attention to source make it both readable for the casual listener and immediately useful to anyone assembling repertoire. Lightwood writes with unobtrusive authority: his attention to metre, source and congregational use gives practical context without scholarly obscurity. Choir directors, organists and curious listeners will find quick orientation to provenance alongside connections between local custom and the familiar tunes of Sunday services. Long valued by students of music in religious life, this work situates many nineteenth century hymns within the musical currents of their time, with sympathetic attention to Victorian era music and the practical needs of parish choirs. It reads as a compact music historians reference as much as a church choir resource: concise entries map tune sources, variants and local practice, making it a companion study for those consulting larger dictionaries. Collectors of classic hymnology study will appreciate its balance of scholarship and anecdote, while casual readers find welcome stories behind the refrains they know. It combines approachable storytelling with measured scholarship, so the same volume serves both as an introductory guide to origins of hymn tunes and as a deeper reference for researchers. It works especially well as a companion to John Julian, complementing rather than duplicating his more encyclopedic treatments. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.