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blog:
How to use gestures to conduct your choir effectively
[this is a version of a post which first appeared on my blog From the Front of the choir]
Sometimes I describe my job as being the guy who stands out front and waves his arms about. “I point, you sing” is what I tell the choir.
&nbs...
blog:
Helping new choir members learn the old songs
[A version of this article first appeared as a post on my blog From the Front of the choir]
When a choir has been going for a long time and you want to revive some of your old repertoire, you will find that a lot of the newer members won’t ...
blog:
Should you have auditions for a workplace or community choir?
[A version of this article first appeared as a post on my blog From the Front of the choir]
Gareth Malone returned to UK television back in 2013 with a second series of The choir: Sing While You Work. The choirmaster went into five different...
video:
Extracto del Réquiem de Mozart en la iglesia de Santo Domingo (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria)
Extracto del concierto del Coro del CMS Canarias y de la Orquesta Sinfónica de Gran Canaria, bajo la dirección de Gregorio Gutierrez, que interpretaron el Réquiem de Mozart en la iglesia de Santo Domingo en el barrio de Vegueta de Las Palmas de Gran Canar... moreExtracto del concierto del Coro del CMS Canarias y de la Orquesta Sinfónica de Gran Canaria, bajo la dirección de Gregorio Gutierrez, que interpretaron el Réquiem de Mozart en la iglesia de Santo Domingo en el barrio de Vegueta de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria el día 3 de abril. El concierto fue enmarcado en el VI Encuentro de Música Religiosa de Canarias
video:
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Tenor's Guide)
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Tenor's Guide)
“Weep O Mine Eyes” was first published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his first collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his most popular madrigals, as well as one of the most internat... moreWeep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Tenor's Guide)
“Weep O Mine Eyes” was first published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his first collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his most popular madrigals, as well as one of the most internationally famous songs of the period. It is apparently based on John Dowland’s “Flow, my Teares”.
Like Dowland’s lyrics, these lyrics express an intense melancholy of someone whose happiness has been abruptly shattered and desires to not be saved from this dark despair. The speaker wishes his death by drowning in his despair, in his tears. The expression of melancholy, and notions of darkness, neglect, Time’s cruelty, spiteful age, were themes used by Elizabethan songwriters to prefigure the stark inevitability of death, and it remained a prominent feature of English literature and music in the time of Elizabeth I and Shakespeare.
More Information, contact us:
guide4score@gmail.com less
video:
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Bass' Guide)
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Bass' Guide)
“Weep O Mine Eyes” was first published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his first collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his most popular madrigals, as well as one of the most internatio... moreWeep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Bass' Guide)
“Weep O Mine Eyes” was first published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his first collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his most popular madrigals, as well as one of the most internationally famous songs of the period. It is apparently based on John Dowland’s “Flow, my Teares”.
Like Dowland’s lyrics, these lyrics express an intense melancholy of someone whose happiness has been abruptly shattered and desires to not be saved from this dark despair. The speaker wishes his death by drowning in his despair, in his tears. The expression of melancholy, and notions of darkness, neglect, Time’s cruelty, spiteful age, were themes used by Elizabethan songwriters to prefigure the stark inevitability of death, and it remained a prominent feature of English literature and music in the time of Elizabeth I and Shakespeare.
More Information, contact us:
guide4score@gmail.com less
video:
Le chant des oyseaux -- Clément Janequin - The Stairwell Carollers, Ottawa.
Ottawa choir, The Stairwell Carollers, perform "Le chant des oyseaux" by Clément Janequin (c. 1485 -- 1558) a French composer of the Renaissance. He was one of the most famous composers of popular chansons of the entire Renaissance.
Audio: Tom Barnes.... moreOttawa choir, The Stairwell Carollers, perform "Le chant des oyseaux" by Clément Janequin (c. 1485 -- 1558) a French composer of the Renaissance. He was one of the most famous composers of popular chansons of the entire Renaissance.
Audio: Tom Barnes. Recorded at St. Barnabas Church, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, June 18th, 2011.
Stills: Holly Massie
Videographer: Zoe Hart.
Editing: Pierre Massie