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Ranging from medieval music to Madonna and beyond, this book covers in detail the many aspects of the voice.
Looks at the history of recording technology and its effect on music, including artistic performance, listening habits, and audience participation.
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A fallen away Catholic, I am back with an everlasting passion, a la Jean Valjean, the protagonist in Les Miserables. I thought this would be an appropriate approach to daily readings and meditations for Christians on the go. I hope ten to twenty verses per 27 books of the New Testament plus Psalms, Proverbs and the Old Testament’s first five books [The Pentateuch] would whet the appetite of daily readers toward a more complete commitment. Why include books of the Old Testament? Because without the Old Testament, the New Testament wouldn’t make any sense. Certainly feel free to delve further into the bible should any daily reading reach out to you in a special way. It is for both Catholics and Protestants; differentiated doctrine is not included. God Bless. May Jesus give you the peace and joy He promises. So, within a year time you will have read the New Testament and more, just about.
The sound of the choir of King's College, Cambridge - its voices perfectly blended, its emotions restrained, its impact sublime - has become famous all over the world, and for many, the distillation of a particular kind of Englishness. This is especially so at Christmas time, with the broadcast of the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, whose centenary is celebrated this year. How did this small band of men and boys in a famous fenland town in England come to sing in the extraordinary way they did in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries? It has been widely assumed that the King's style essentially continues an English choral tradition inherited directly from the Middle Ages. In th...
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