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Keyword: thomastallis

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  • Musical Interlude topic for June 2022

    06/01/2022 9:31:54 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 57 replies
    YouTube ^ | various | various
    June Dance | May 27, 2021 | Julien Daian Quintet - Topic Featured Artist: Sylvain Gontard Bass Guitar: Tommaso Montagnani Drums: Octave Ducasse Flute: Cyril Benhamou Piano: Edouard Monnin Saxophone: Julien Daïan Trumpet: Alex Tassel Trumpet: Sylvain Gontard Composer: Julien Daïan
  • Musical Interlude topic for March 2022

    02/28/2022 11:17:03 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 69 replies
    YouTube etc ^ | March 2022 | varies
    Drums, Marimba, Percussion: Barrie BarlowOrchestral Arranger: Dee PalmerConductor: Dee PalmerFlute, Producer, Saxophone: Ian AndersonAcoustic Guitar: Ian AndersonLead Vocals: Ian AndersonBacking Vocals: Ian AndersonBass Guitar: Jeffrey HammondAccordion, Organ, Piano, Synthesizer: John EvanElectric Guitar: Martin BarreGuitar: Martin BarreOrchestra Leader: Patrick HallingUnknown: Robin BlackProducer: Terry EllisWriter: Ian AndersonMarch, the Mad Scientist (2002 Remaster)November 6, 2014 | Jethro Tull
  • Religious Art of the Venetian Renaissance to the music of Thomas Tallis

    04/23/2018 11:02:59 AM PDT · by mairdie · 20 replies
    The religious paintings of Jacopo Bellini (1400-1470), his sons Giovanni (1430-1516) and Gentile (1429-1507), his son-in-law Andrea Mantegna (1431–1506), his student Giorgione (1477-1510), and Giorgione's student, Titian (ca1490-1576). The music is from Spem in Alium by Thomas Tallis (1505-1585), a British composer.
  • Henry VIII’s last wife is heading for debut [Gaude Gloriosa unheard in 450 years]

    04/13/2017 12:59:45 AM PDT · by blueplum · 12 replies
    Slipped Disk ^ | 10 April 2017 | Norman LeBrecht
    Music from Thomas Tallis’s motet Gaude gloriosa was found buried in the walls of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, in 1978. Recently, the conductor David Skinner has identified the text as being by Henry VIII’s sixth and last queen Catherine Parr. The words are from Parr’s psalm paraphrase ‘Against Enemies’ in her first publication Psalms or Prayers, published in London in 1544, and were set as a contrafact of Tallis’s Gaude gloriosa Dei mater. The work will be performed at St John’s Smith Square London on Good Friday (14 April 2017). David Skinner says: ‘These discoveries are not only significant for cultural historians, but also fundamentally challenge...