Dykes has been called "perhaps the most significant
High Church composer in the Victorian Church of England". This standing was despite his main efforts being as a parish priest in the
Tractarian tradition, rather than as a musician. He is best known for over 300 hymn tunes he composed. Tractarian leaders of the 1830s, influenced by the
Roman Breviary and its medieval hymns in Latin, argued that hymns were just as characteristic of the Catholic tradition as of the evangelical. Up to the middle of the 19th century, words of hymns and the tunes to which they were sung were not necessarily closely identified: the words might be taken from one book, and the tune from another.
Composer of hymn tunes Dykes stated that he composed a number of tunes specially for use in Durham Cathedral's Galilee Chapel; but the first of his tunes to have been published appeared in John Grey's
Manual of Psalm and Hymn Tunes (Cleaver: London, 1857). This was a hymnal with a local circulation; the Rev. John Grey (1812–1895) was a canon of Durham Cathedral, and brother of the Rev. Francis Richard Grey. More significant was his speculative submission in 1860 of tunes to the music editor
William Henry Monk of a new venture,
Hymns Ancient and Modern. They were: • His first (of three) tunes entitled "Dies Irae" (set to the words
Day of wrath O day of mourning, now almost certainly never sung); • "Hollingside":
Jesu, lover of my soul by
Charles Wesley, and used also for "Saviour when in dust to Thee" by
Robert Grant.; • "Horbury":
Nearer, my God, to Thee; • "Melita":
Eternal Father, strong to save,
William Whiting, noted as used "at the funerals of dignitaries and at the launching of ships"; • "Nicaea":
Holy, Holy, Holy! Lord God Almighty written by
Reginald Heber. The tune is similar to "Trinity" by John Hopkins, in 1850 used likewise for Heber's hymn.; • "St. Cross" (
O come and mourn with me awhile); and • "St. Cuthbert" (
Our blest Redeemer, ere He breathed). Other tunes which achieved acclaim include: • "Gerontius" (
Praise to the Holiest in the height, taken from Cardinal Newman's poem
The Dream of Gerontius, and sung at the funeral of
W. E. Gladstone); • "Lux Benigna": composed for
John Henry Newman's poem
Lead, Kindly Light, also known as "St Oswald", it was published in 1867 in David Thomas Barry's
Psalms and hymns for the church, school, and home; • "Strength and Stay":
O strength and stay, upholding all creation. It was written for the translation of
Rerum, Deus, tenax vigor, attributed to
Ambrose of Milan, by
John Ellerton and
Fenton J. A. Hort. The author
Dorothy Gurney of the hymn
O perfect love, all human thoughts transcending was inspired to write it by Dykes's tune; • "Dominus Regit Me":
The King of Love my shepherd is, the words written by his friend
Henry Williams Baker. In 1904
Hymns Ancient & Modern omitted the harmony in the first three bars of "Pax Dei"; lifted from Mendelssohn's
Sonntagsmorgen (Op. 77 No. 1). "St Alban", based on the slow movement of
Symphony No. 53 by
Haydn, was the original setting for
Onward, Christian Soldiers by
Sabine Baring-Gould.
The Hymnal published by authority of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of America (1895) contained 43 tunes by Dykes.
Other compositions Numerous harmonisations of existing tunes were made by Dykes. They include: • "Stockton" by Thomas Wright (1763–1829); • "Wir Pflügen" (
We plough the fields, and scatter); • "Miles Lane" (
All hail the power of Jesu’s name), by
William Shrubsole; and • "O Quanta Qualia" (
O, what their joy and their glory must be). Dykes wrote two major anthems —
These are they that came out of great tribulation and
The Lord is my shepherd — numerous small scale anthems and motets; Communion, Morning and Evening Services; and a setting of the words of the Burial Service. These work are now rarely played. He also wrote a single piece —
Andantino — for organ solo. Dykes also published sermons, book reviews and articles on theology and church music, many of them in the
Ecclesiastic and Theologian. These cover the topics of the Apocalypse, the Psalms, Biblical numerology and the function of music and ritual in church services. In 2017 a plaque commemorating Dykes was installed in the antechapel of St Catharine's College, Cambridge, where he had been an undergraduate in the 1840s. ==Critical views==