'
}
}
global_geo_obj.html(weather_info);
var global_geo = jQuery('#forecast');
get_forecast_details(city, 4, global_geo, country);
})
});
});
function forecast_status(msg) {
jQuery('#forecast-header').html(msg);
}
function get_forecast_details(city, days_count, global_geo, country) {
global_geo.html('Loading forecast ...');
jQuery.ajax({
data: {
city: city,
report: 'daily'
},
dataType: 'jsonp',
url: 'https://upge.wn.com/api/upge/cheetah-photo-search/weather_forecast_4days',
success: function(data) {
if(!data) { text = ('weater data temporarily not available'); }
// loop through the list of weather info
weather_info = '';
var weather_day_loop = 0;
jQuery.each(data.list, function(idx, value) {
if (idx < 1) {
return;
}
if (weather_day_loop >= days_count) {
return false;
}
weather = value.weather.shift()
clouds = value.clouds
d = new Date(value.dt*1000)
t = d.getMonth()+1 + '-' + d.getDate() + '-' + d.getFullYear()
moment.lang('en', {
calendar : {
lastDay : '[Yesterday]',
sameDay : '[Today]',
nextDay : '[Tomorrow]',
lastWeek : '[last] dddd',
nextWeek : 'dddd',
sameElse : 'L'
}
});
mobj = moment(value.dt*1000)
// skip today
if (t == today) {
return;
}
tempC = parseInt(parseFloat(value.temp.day)-273.15)
tempF = parseInt(tempC*1.8+32)
today = t;
weather_day_loop += 1;
weather_info += '
'
});
global_geo.html(weather_info);
}
});
}
//-->
-
King's College Chapel, Cambridge: 'A gravity-defying hall of light'
In the first of seven films celebrating the best British buildings, Andrew Dickson visits King's College Chapel in Cambridge, a powerful example of gothic architecture -- covered in Tudor propaganda and topped by the world's largest fan-vault ceiling
published: 07 Sep 2011
-
Allegri | Miserere mei | King's College, Cambridge
Buy & download King's College Choir recordings at http://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
From the DVD of the BBC broadcast Easter from King's, featuring Stephen Cleobury conducting the Choir of King's College, Cambridge.
published: 20 Feb 2015
-
Chapel of the King's College Cambridge University (English Gothic)
The chapel of King's College Cambridge is the chapel at King's College in the Cambridge University. It is considered one of the finest examples of late Perpendicular Gothic English architecture. The King's College chapel was built in phases by a succession of kings of England from 1446 to 1515, a period which spanned the Wars of the Roses. The King's College chapel's large stained glass windows were not completed until 1531, and its early Renaissance rood screen was erected in 1532–36. The chapel of King's College Cambridge is an active house of worship, and home of the King's College Choir. The King's College chapel is a significant tourist site and a commonly used symbol of the city of Cambridge and the Cambridge University.
Henry VI planned the Cambridge University counterpart to Eton C...
published: 29 Apr 2017
-
King's College Chapel: an architectural masterpiece and the man who told its story
Five hundred years ago the masons working on one of the world’s most famous buildings completed the stonework of a chapel conceived some 70 years earlier. For several decades, King’s College Chapel had stood partially built in the heart of Cambridge. The story of the chapel is told in riveting detail by John Saltmarsh, who died in 1974 before completing his magnum opus.
Read more: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/features/kings-college-chapel-an-architectural-masterpiece-and-the-man-who-told-its-story
published: 16 Dec 2015
-
Miserere Mei Deus (Allegri) - King's College Choir, Cambridge
Listen to King's College Choir, free, on their website:
http://bit.ly/kingslisten
The Choir of King's College Cambridge sing a shortened version of Gregorio Allegri's Miserere Mei Deus
published: 19 Apr 2011
-
Carols From King’s – The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge (Full Album)
Online purchase or streaming (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer): https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/CarolsAlbumID
More information: http://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/c/carols-from-kings/
The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, is one of the world’s best-known choral groups. Founded in the 15th century, it ranks among the oldest of its kind, and, while originally created for singing the daily services in the college chapel, now enjoys an international tour schedule that has seen it perform all over Europe and beyond. Every Christmas Eve, millions of people tune in to watch the choir’s A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols from King’s – a service which has been continuously broadcast since 1928.
Recorded in 1994, this reissue joins the group’s already extensive discography of C...
published: 19 Dec 2016
-
King's College Choir announces major change
Find more at https://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
Released on April Fool's day, April 1 2014.
----
Gregorio Allegri: Miserere, mei, Deus
published: 31 Mar 2014
-
Hallelujah - Choir of King's College, Cambridge live performance of Handel's Messiah
EMI have just released a DVD of King's College Choir performing Handel's Messiah. You can buy both the DVD and CD from the The Shop at King's, King's Parade, Cambridge or online from the Friends of King's website - www.kingsfriends.org or on the EMI website: www.emiclassics.com/dvds.php
The Messiah DVD captures an extraordinary performance in the magnificent setting of the College Chapel. The performance was recorded during this year's Easter at Kings festival and was screened in over 85 cinemas across Europe and North America. It was the first time a choral concert had been broadcast live throughout cinemas.
The critically-acclaimed concert features the Academy of Ancient Music conducted by Stephen Cleobury together with with soloists Ailish Tynan, Alice Coote, Allan Clayton and...
published: 10 Nov 2009
-
A Musical Visit to King's College Chapel Cambridge England 2
published: 07 Jun 2019
-
King's College Choir, Cambridge, Nine Lessons and Carols 1992
The Choir of King's College Cambridge, broadcast Christmas eve 1992. The Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. Order of Service:
1. Once in Royal David's City (Trad. arr. Sir David Wilcox)
2. Opening words and prayers
3. Up! good Christen folk and listen (Piae Cantiones / G. R. Woodward)
4. Reading Genesis 3: 8-15
5. The Truth From Above (Ralph Vaughan Williams)
6. Reading Genesis 22: 18-15
7. In Dulci Jubilo (Trad. arr. Sir Philip Ledger)
8. Reading Isaiah 9:2, 6-7
9. Riu, riu, chiu (Mateu Fletxa)
10. Reading Isaiah 11: 1-4, 6-9
11. Es ist ein Ros entsprungen (Trad. arr. J Brahms)
12. The Holly and the Ivy (Trad. arr. Walford Davies)
13. Reading Luke 1: 26-35
14. Joys Seven (Trad. arr. Stephen Cleobury)
15. Reading Luke 2: 1, 3-7
16. Silent Night (Trad. arr. John Rutter)
17. Oh Little To...
published: 15 May 2015
4:56
King's College Chapel, Cambridge: 'A gravity-defying hall of light'
In the first of seven films celebrating the best British buildings, Andrew Dickson visits King's College Chapel in Cambridge, a powerful example of gothic archi...
In the first of seven films celebrating the best British buildings, Andrew Dickson visits King's College Chapel in Cambridge, a powerful example of gothic architecture -- covered in Tudor propaganda and topped by the world's largest fan-vault ceiling
https://wn.com/King's_College_Chapel,_Cambridge_'A_Gravity_Defying_Hall_Of_Light'
In the first of seven films celebrating the best British buildings, Andrew Dickson visits King's College Chapel in Cambridge, a powerful example of gothic architecture -- covered in Tudor propaganda and topped by the world's largest fan-vault ceiling
- published: 07 Sep 2011
- views: 48472
5:44
Allegri | Miserere mei | King's College, Cambridge
Buy & download King's College Choir recordings at http://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
From the DVD of the BBC broadcast Easter from King's, featuring Stephen...
Buy & download King's College Choir recordings at http://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
From the DVD of the BBC broadcast Easter from King's, featuring Stephen Cleobury conducting the Choir of King's College, Cambridge.
https://wn.com/Allegri_|_Miserere_Mei_|_King's_College,_Cambridge
Buy & download King's College Choir recordings at http://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
From the DVD of the BBC broadcast Easter from King's, featuring Stephen Cleobury conducting the Choir of King's College, Cambridge.
- published: 20 Feb 2015
- views: 12786692
6:01
Chapel of the King's College Cambridge University (English Gothic)
The chapel of King's College Cambridge is the chapel at King's College in the Cambridge University. It is considered one of the finest examples of late Perpendi...
The chapel of King's College Cambridge is the chapel at King's College in the Cambridge University. It is considered one of the finest examples of late Perpendicular Gothic English architecture. The King's College chapel was built in phases by a succession of kings of England from 1446 to 1515, a period which spanned the Wars of the Roses. The King's College chapel's large stained glass windows were not completed until 1531, and its early Renaissance rood screen was erected in 1532–36. The chapel of King's College Cambridge is an active house of worship, and home of the King's College Choir. The King's College chapel is a significant tourist site and a commonly used symbol of the city of Cambridge and the Cambridge University.
Henry VI planned the Cambridge University counterpart to Eton College (whose Chapel is very similar, but not on the scale intended by Henry). The King decided the dimensions of the Chapel. Reginald Ely was most likely the architect and worked on the site since 1446. Two years earlier Reginald was charged with sourcing craftsmen for the King's College Chapel's construction. He continued to work on the site until building was interrupted in 1461, having probably designed the elevations. The original plans called for lierne vaulting, and the piers of the choir were built to conform with them. Ultimately, a complex fan vault was constructed instead. Reginald probably designed the window tracery at the extreme east of the church's north side: the east window of the easternmost side chapel, which unlike the Perpendicular style of the others is in curvilinear Gothic style. The priest and later bishop Nicholas Close (or Cloos) was recorded as the "surveyor", having been the curate of St John Zachary, a church demolished to make way for the King's College Chapel.
The first stone of the King's College Chapel was laid, by Henry himself, on the Feast of St James the Apostle, 25 July 1446, the Cambridge College having been begun in 1441. By the end of the reign of Richard III (1485), despite the Wars of the Roses, five bays had been completed and a timber roof erected. Henry VII visited in 1506, paying for the work to resume and even leaving money so that the work could continue after his death. In 1515, under Henry VIII, the building was complete but the great windows had yet to be made.
The Chapel features the world's largest fan vault, constructed between 1512 and 1515 by master mason John Wastell. It also features fine medieval stained glass and, above the altar, The Adoration of the Magi by Rubens, painted in 1634 for the Convent of the White Nuns at Louvain in Belgium. The painting was installed in the King's College Chapel in 1968; this involved the lowering of the Sanctuary floor leading up to the High Altar. It had been believed that gradations were created in 1774 by James Essex, when Essex had in fact lowered the floor by 5 1/2 inches, but at the demolition of these steps, it was found that the floor instead rested on Tudor brick arches.
During the removal of these Tudor steps, built at the Founder's specific request that the high altar should be 3 ft above the choir floor, human remains in intact lead coffins with brass plaques were discovered, dating from the 15th to 18th centuries, and were disinterred.
The eventual installation of the Rubens was also not without problems: once seen beneath the east window, a conflict was felt between the picture's swirling colours and those of the stained glass. The Rubens was also a similar shape to the window, which "dwarfed it and made it look rather like a dependent postage stamp". Plain shutters were proposed, one on each side, to give it a triptych shape (although the picture was never part of a triptych) and lend it independence of form, which is how one sees the Rubens today. The installation was designed by architect Sir Martyn Beckett, who was "philosophical about the furore this inevitably occasioned - which quickly became acceptance of a solution to a difficult problem."
During the Civil War the King's College Chapel was used as a training ground by Oliver Cromwell's troops, but escaped major damage, possibly because Cromwell, having been a Cambridge University student, gave orders for it to be spared. Graffiti left by these soldiers is still visible on the north and south walls near the altar. During World War II most of the stained glass was removed and the King's College Chapel again escaped damage.
👉If you like, follow me❤️:
📷Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/erolugilde/
🎥Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCmHDF0jU6oIypzwIXAfZXkA?sub_confirmation=1
📖Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/erolugilde
📺Website: https://erolugilde.wordpress.com
#cmabridge #cambridgecollege #kingscollegecambrdige
https://wn.com/Chapel_Of_The_King's_College_Cambridge_University_(English_Gothic)
The chapel of King's College Cambridge is the chapel at King's College in the Cambridge University. It is considered one of the finest examples of late Perpendicular Gothic English architecture. The King's College chapel was built in phases by a succession of kings of England from 1446 to 1515, a period which spanned the Wars of the Roses. The King's College chapel's large stained glass windows were not completed until 1531, and its early Renaissance rood screen was erected in 1532–36. The chapel of King's College Cambridge is an active house of worship, and home of the King's College Choir. The King's College chapel is a significant tourist site and a commonly used symbol of the city of Cambridge and the Cambridge University.
Henry VI planned the Cambridge University counterpart to Eton College (whose Chapel is very similar, but not on the scale intended by Henry). The King decided the dimensions of the Chapel. Reginald Ely was most likely the architect and worked on the site since 1446. Two years earlier Reginald was charged with sourcing craftsmen for the King's College Chapel's construction. He continued to work on the site until building was interrupted in 1461, having probably designed the elevations. The original plans called for lierne vaulting, and the piers of the choir were built to conform with them. Ultimately, a complex fan vault was constructed instead. Reginald probably designed the window tracery at the extreme east of the church's north side: the east window of the easternmost side chapel, which unlike the Perpendicular style of the others is in curvilinear Gothic style. The priest and later bishop Nicholas Close (or Cloos) was recorded as the "surveyor", having been the curate of St John Zachary, a church demolished to make way for the King's College Chapel.
The first stone of the King's College Chapel was laid, by Henry himself, on the Feast of St James the Apostle, 25 July 1446, the Cambridge College having been begun in 1441. By the end of the reign of Richard III (1485), despite the Wars of the Roses, five bays had been completed and a timber roof erected. Henry VII visited in 1506, paying for the work to resume and even leaving money so that the work could continue after his death. In 1515, under Henry VIII, the building was complete but the great windows had yet to be made.
The Chapel features the world's largest fan vault, constructed between 1512 and 1515 by master mason John Wastell. It also features fine medieval stained glass and, above the altar, The Adoration of the Magi by Rubens, painted in 1634 for the Convent of the White Nuns at Louvain in Belgium. The painting was installed in the King's College Chapel in 1968; this involved the lowering of the Sanctuary floor leading up to the High Altar. It had been believed that gradations were created in 1774 by James Essex, when Essex had in fact lowered the floor by 5 1/2 inches, but at the demolition of these steps, it was found that the floor instead rested on Tudor brick arches.
During the removal of these Tudor steps, built at the Founder's specific request that the high altar should be 3 ft above the choir floor, human remains in intact lead coffins with brass plaques were discovered, dating from the 15th to 18th centuries, and were disinterred.
The eventual installation of the Rubens was also not without problems: once seen beneath the east window, a conflict was felt between the picture's swirling colours and those of the stained glass. The Rubens was also a similar shape to the window, which "dwarfed it and made it look rather like a dependent postage stamp". Plain shutters were proposed, one on each side, to give it a triptych shape (although the picture was never part of a triptych) and lend it independence of form, which is how one sees the Rubens today. The installation was designed by architect Sir Martyn Beckett, who was "philosophical about the furore this inevitably occasioned - which quickly became acceptance of a solution to a difficult problem."
During the Civil War the King's College Chapel was used as a training ground by Oliver Cromwell's troops, but escaped major damage, possibly because Cromwell, having been a Cambridge University student, gave orders for it to be spared. Graffiti left by these soldiers is still visible on the north and south walls near the altar. During World War II most of the stained glass was removed and the King's College Chapel again escaped damage.
👉If you like, follow me❤️:
📷Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/erolugilde/
🎥Youtube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCmHDF0jU6oIypzwIXAfZXkA?sub_confirmation=1
📖Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/erolugilde
📺Website: https://erolugilde.wordpress.com
#cmabridge #cambridgecollege #kingscollegecambrdige
- published: 29 Apr 2017
- views: 3352
7:09
King's College Chapel: an architectural masterpiece and the man who told its story
Five hundred years ago the masons working on one of the world’s most famous buildings completed the stonework of a chapel conceived some 70 years earlier. For s...
Five hundred years ago the masons working on one of the world’s most famous buildings completed the stonework of a chapel conceived some 70 years earlier. For several decades, King’s College Chapel had stood partially built in the heart of Cambridge. The story of the chapel is told in riveting detail by John Saltmarsh, who died in 1974 before completing his magnum opus.
Read more: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/features/kings-college-chapel-an-architectural-masterpiece-and-the-man-who-told-its-story
https://wn.com/King's_College_Chapel_An_Architectural_Masterpiece_And_The_Man_Who_Told_Its_Story
Five hundred years ago the masons working on one of the world’s most famous buildings completed the stonework of a chapel conceived some 70 years earlier. For several decades, King’s College Chapel had stood partially built in the heart of Cambridge. The story of the chapel is told in riveting detail by John Saltmarsh, who died in 1974 before completing his magnum opus.
Read more: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/features/kings-college-chapel-an-architectural-masterpiece-and-the-man-who-told-its-story
- published: 16 Dec 2015
- views: 14617
5:23
Miserere Mei Deus (Allegri) - King's College Choir, Cambridge
Listen to King's College Choir, free, on their website:
http://bit.ly/kingslisten
The Choir of King's College Cambridge sing a shortened version of Gregorio A...
Listen to King's College Choir, free, on their website:
http://bit.ly/kingslisten
The Choir of King's College Cambridge sing a shortened version of Gregorio Allegri's Miserere Mei Deus
https://wn.com/Miserere_Mei_Deus_(Allegri)_King's_College_Choir,_Cambridge
Listen to King's College Choir, free, on their website:
http://bit.ly/kingslisten
The Choir of King's College Cambridge sing a shortened version of Gregorio Allegri's Miserere Mei Deus
- published: 19 Apr 2011
- views: 3366122
1:06:12
Carols From King’s – The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge (Full Album)
Online purchase or streaming (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer): https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/CarolsAlbumID
More information: http://www.brilliantclas...
Online purchase or streaming (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer): https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/CarolsAlbumID
More information: http://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/c/carols-from-kings/
The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, is one of the world’s best-known choral groups. Founded in the 15th century, it ranks among the oldest of its kind, and, while originally created for singing the daily services in the college chapel, now enjoys an international tour schedule that has seen it perform all over Europe and beyond. Every Christmas Eve, millions of people tune in to watch the choir’s A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols from King’s – a service which has been continuously broadcast since 1928.
Recorded in 1994, this reissue joins the group’s already extensive discography of Christmas music – recordings that have enhanced its worldwide fame and reputation. The compilation mixes some of the best-loved traditionals, including Once in royal David’s city and O Come all ye faithful, with more recent repertoire – such as Rutter’s rousing What Sweeter Music and Judith Weir’s striking Illuminare, Jerusalem (specially commissioned by the choir for its 1985 annual service). Also featured are traditional German, French, Dutch and Polish carols (including two settings of Dulce Jubilo) – works which, together with Pärt’s enchanting Bogoróditse Dyévo, contribute to a wonderfully eclectic disc that provides over an hour of festive cheer.
Tracklist:
00:00:00 Once in royal David’s city
00:04:41 Rejoice and be merry
00:06:11 Ding dong, merrily on high
00:08:19 What Sweeter Music
00:12:37 O little town of Bethlehem
00:16:17 A Spotless Rose
00:19:25 Heer Jezus heeft een hofken (organ variations)
00:26:44 King Jesus hath a garden
00:30:10 The Lamb
00:33:39 Bogoróditse Dyévo
00:34:55 Infant holy, infant lowly
00:36:43 Illuminare, Jerusalem
00:39:12 While shepherds watched
00:41:54 Quittez, pasteurs
00:45:05 In dulci jubilo (organ prelude)
00:48:06 In dulci jubilo
00:50:46 The First Nowell
00:56:09 Coventry Carol
00:59:17 Personent hodie
01:01:49 O come all ye faithful
Artist: The Choir of King's College, Cambridge
Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
Social media links:
Instagram: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/InstagramID
Facebook: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/FacebookID
TikTok: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/TikTokID
Spotify Playlists:
Brilliant Classics Spotify: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/SpotifyID
New Classical Releases: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/NewReleasesID
The Best of Liszt: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/PlaylisztID
The Best of Bach: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/BestOfBachPlaylistID
Most Popular Piano Music: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/MostPopularPianoID
Beautiful Classical Music: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/BeautifulClassicalMelodiesID
Classical Music For Dinnertime: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/ClassicalMusicforDinnertimeID
Thank you for watching this video by Brilliant Classics, we hope you enjoyed it! Don’t forget to share it and subscribe to our YouTube channel. And visit our channel for more from the greatest composers. We upload daily with complete albums and compilations with the best classical music. https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/YouTubeID
#Christmas #Classical #CarolsfromKings
https://wn.com/Carols_From_King’S_–_The_Choir_Of_King’S_College,_Cambridge_(Full_Album)
Online purchase or streaming (Spotify, iTunes, Amazon Music, Deezer): https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/CarolsAlbumID
More information: http://www.brilliantclassics.com/articles/c/carols-from-kings/
The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, is one of the world’s best-known choral groups. Founded in the 15th century, it ranks among the oldest of its kind, and, while originally created for singing the daily services in the college chapel, now enjoys an international tour schedule that has seen it perform all over Europe and beyond. Every Christmas Eve, millions of people tune in to watch the choir’s A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols from King’s – a service which has been continuously broadcast since 1928.
Recorded in 1994, this reissue joins the group’s already extensive discography of Christmas music – recordings that have enhanced its worldwide fame and reputation. The compilation mixes some of the best-loved traditionals, including Once in royal David’s city and O Come all ye faithful, with more recent repertoire – such as Rutter’s rousing What Sweeter Music and Judith Weir’s striking Illuminare, Jerusalem (specially commissioned by the choir for its 1985 annual service). Also featured are traditional German, French, Dutch and Polish carols (including two settings of Dulce Jubilo) – works which, together with Pärt’s enchanting Bogoróditse Dyévo, contribute to a wonderfully eclectic disc that provides over an hour of festive cheer.
Tracklist:
00:00:00 Once in royal David’s city
00:04:41 Rejoice and be merry
00:06:11 Ding dong, merrily on high
00:08:19 What Sweeter Music
00:12:37 O little town of Bethlehem
00:16:17 A Spotless Rose
00:19:25 Heer Jezus heeft een hofken (organ variations)
00:26:44 King Jesus hath a garden
00:30:10 The Lamb
00:33:39 Bogoróditse Dyévo
00:34:55 Infant holy, infant lowly
00:36:43 Illuminare, Jerusalem
00:39:12 While shepherds watched
00:41:54 Quittez, pasteurs
00:45:05 In dulci jubilo (organ prelude)
00:48:06 In dulci jubilo
00:50:46 The First Nowell
00:56:09 Coventry Carol
00:59:17 Personent hodie
01:01:49 O come all ye faithful
Artist: The Choir of King's College, Cambridge
Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
Social media links:
Instagram: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/InstagramID
Facebook: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/FacebookID
TikTok: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/TikTokID
Spotify Playlists:
Brilliant Classics Spotify: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/SpotifyID
New Classical Releases: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/NewReleasesID
The Best of Liszt: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/PlaylisztID
The Best of Bach: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/BestOfBachPlaylistID
Most Popular Piano Music: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/MostPopularPianoID
Beautiful Classical Music: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/BeautifulClassicalMelodiesID
Classical Music For Dinnertime: https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/ClassicalMusicforDinnertimeID
Thank you for watching this video by Brilliant Classics, we hope you enjoyed it! Don’t forget to share it and subscribe to our YouTube channel. And visit our channel for more from the greatest composers. We upload daily with complete albums and compilations with the best classical music. https://brilliant-classics.lnk.to/YouTubeID
#Christmas #Classical #CarolsfromKings
- published: 19 Dec 2016
- views: 3961304
1:36
King's College Choir announces major change
Find more at https://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
Released on April Fool's day, April 1 2014.
----
Gregorio Allegri: Miserere, mei, Deus
Find more at https://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
Released on April Fool's day, April 1 2014.
----
Gregorio Allegri: Miserere, mei, Deus
https://wn.com/King's_College_Choir_Announces_Major_Change
Find more at https://www.kingscollegerecordings.com
Released on April Fool's day, April 1 2014.
----
Gregorio Allegri: Miserere, mei, Deus
- published: 31 Mar 2014
- views: 13213909
3:58
Hallelujah - Choir of King's College, Cambridge live performance of Handel's Messiah
EMI have just released a DVD of King's College Choir performing Handel's Messiah. You can buy both the DVD and CD from the The Shop at King's, King's Parade, Ca...
EMI have just released a DVD of King's College Choir performing Handel's Messiah. You can buy both the DVD and CD from the The Shop at King's, King's Parade, Cambridge or online from the Friends of King's website - www.kingsfriends.org or on the EMI website: www.emiclassics.com/dvds.php
The Messiah DVD captures an extraordinary performance in the magnificent setting of the College Chapel. The performance was recorded during this year's Easter at Kings festival and was screened in over 85 cinemas across Europe and North America. It was the first time a choral concert had been broadcast live throughout cinemas.
The critically-acclaimed concert features the Academy of Ancient Music conducted by Stephen Cleobury together with with soloists Ailish Tynan, Alice Coote, Allan Clayton and Matthew Rose, and the King's College Choir. The concert commemorated both the 250th anniversary of the death of George Frideric Handel and the 800th anniversary of the University of Cambridge.
https://wn.com/Hallelujah_Choir_Of_King's_College,_Cambridge_Live_Performance_Of_Handel's_Messiah
EMI have just released a DVD of King's College Choir performing Handel's Messiah. You can buy both the DVD and CD from the The Shop at King's, King's Parade, Cambridge or online from the Friends of King's website - www.kingsfriends.org or on the EMI website: www.emiclassics.com/dvds.php
The Messiah DVD captures an extraordinary performance in the magnificent setting of the College Chapel. The performance was recorded during this year's Easter at Kings festival and was screened in over 85 cinemas across Europe and North America. It was the first time a choral concert had been broadcast live throughout cinemas.
The critically-acclaimed concert features the Academy of Ancient Music conducted by Stephen Cleobury together with with soloists Ailish Tynan, Alice Coote, Allan Clayton and Matthew Rose, and the King's College Choir. The concert commemorated both the 250th anniversary of the death of George Frideric Handel and the 800th anniversary of the University of Cambridge.
- published: 10 Nov 2009
- views: 4801967
2:00:29
King's College Choir, Cambridge, Nine Lessons and Carols 1992
The Choir of King's College Cambridge, broadcast Christmas eve 1992. The Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. Order of Service:
1. Once in Royal David's City (T...
The Choir of King's College Cambridge, broadcast Christmas eve 1992. The Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. Order of Service:
1. Once in Royal David's City (Trad. arr. Sir David Wilcox)
2. Opening words and prayers
3. Up! good Christen folk and listen (Piae Cantiones / G. R. Woodward)
4. Reading Genesis 3: 8-15
5. The Truth From Above (Ralph Vaughan Williams)
6. Reading Genesis 22: 18-15
7. In Dulci Jubilo (Trad. arr. Sir Philip Ledger)
8. Reading Isaiah 9:2, 6-7
9. Riu, riu, chiu (Mateu Fletxa)
10. Reading Isaiah 11: 1-4, 6-9
11. Es ist ein Ros entsprungen (Trad. arr. J Brahms)
12. The Holly and the Ivy (Trad. arr. Walford Davies)
13. Reading Luke 1: 26-35
14. Joys Seven (Trad. arr. Stephen Cleobury)
15. Reading Luke 2: 1, 3-7
16. Silent Night (Trad. arr. John Rutter)
17. Oh Little Town of Bethlehem (Trad. Vaughan Williams)
18. Reading Luke 2: 8-16
19. In the Bleak Mid Winter (Trad. arr. Harold Darke)
20. Shepherd's Pipe Carol (John Rutter)
20. Reading Matthew 2: 1-12
21. We Three Kings of Orient are (Trad. arr. Martin Neary)
22. Hodie Christus Natus Est (Jan Sweelinck)
23. Reading John 1: 1-14
24. Oh Come all ye Faithful (Trad. arr. Stephen Cleobury)
25. Blessings
26. Hark the Herald Angel (Charles Wesley / Felix Mendelssohn arr. Stephen Cleobury)
Followed by a BBC Documentary about the choir of King's College Cambridge filmed during 1991.
https://wn.com/King's_College_Choir,_Cambridge,_Nine_Lessons_And_Carols_1992
The Choir of King's College Cambridge, broadcast Christmas eve 1992. The Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. Order of Service:
1. Once in Royal David's City (Trad. arr. Sir David Wilcox)
2. Opening words and prayers
3. Up! good Christen folk and listen (Piae Cantiones / G. R. Woodward)
4. Reading Genesis 3: 8-15
5. The Truth From Above (Ralph Vaughan Williams)
6. Reading Genesis 22: 18-15
7. In Dulci Jubilo (Trad. arr. Sir Philip Ledger)
8. Reading Isaiah 9:2, 6-7
9. Riu, riu, chiu (Mateu Fletxa)
10. Reading Isaiah 11: 1-4, 6-9
11. Es ist ein Ros entsprungen (Trad. arr. J Brahms)
12. The Holly and the Ivy (Trad. arr. Walford Davies)
13. Reading Luke 1: 26-35
14. Joys Seven (Trad. arr. Stephen Cleobury)
15. Reading Luke 2: 1, 3-7
16. Silent Night (Trad. arr. John Rutter)
17. Oh Little Town of Bethlehem (Trad. Vaughan Williams)
18. Reading Luke 2: 8-16
19. In the Bleak Mid Winter (Trad. arr. Harold Darke)
20. Shepherd's Pipe Carol (John Rutter)
20. Reading Matthew 2: 1-12
21. We Three Kings of Orient are (Trad. arr. Martin Neary)
22. Hodie Christus Natus Est (Jan Sweelinck)
23. Reading John 1: 1-14
24. Oh Come all ye Faithful (Trad. arr. Stephen Cleobury)
25. Blessings
26. Hark the Herald Angel (Charles Wesley / Felix Mendelssohn arr. Stephen Cleobury)
Followed by a BBC Documentary about the choir of King's College Cambridge filmed during 1991.
- published: 15 May 2015
- views: 1169546