Mistango Choir Festival

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East Rand Male Symphony
video: East Rand Male Symphony

Malaika

Libera Nos
video: Libera Nos

University of Utah Chamber Choir sings "Libera Nos" by John Sheppard in the Libby Gardner Concert hall for their Fall 2012 Concert, Directed by Dr. Barlow Bradford, accompanied by Jared Pierce

Danny Boy
video: Danny Boy

University of Utah Chamber Choir sings "Danny Boy" arr by Dr. Barlow Bradford in the Libby Gardner Concert hall for their Fall 2012 Concert, Directed by Dr. Barlow Bradford, accompanied by Jared Pierce

Acquainted With The Night
video: Acquainted With The Night

Lass="view_more">Depression, isolation, alienation: themes addressed in this setting of Robert Frost’s metaphorical text. The choir paints images over a repeated jazz piano bass line. The sense of walking at night is evoked as are the inner-blues of the poem. Rhythmic and...  Lass="view_more_link" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="$(this).getParent().getNext().style.display='';$(this).getParent().style.display='none';">moreLass="view_more" style="display:none;">Depression, isolation, alienation: themes addressed in this setting of Robert Frost’s metaphorical text. The choir paints images over a repeated jazz piano bass line. The sense of walking at night is evoked as are the inner-blues of the poem. Rhythmic and thought-provoking. This is a work of medium difficulty, appropriate for High School, collegiate and Community choirs. Commissioned by Penn High School Choirs, Andrew Nemeth, Allison Secaur, Ethan Schopp, directors.  

This is the Body and Blood of Christ.wmv
video: This is the Body and Blood of Christ.wmv

"This is the Body and Blood of Christ", composed by local Ada composers Davison and Lupinski, as performed by the East Central University Chorale on April 19, 2010, at St Joseph Catholic Church in Ada, OK.

Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Alto's Guide)
video: Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Alto's Guide)

Lass="view_more">Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Alto'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 internati...  Lass="view_more_link" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="$(this).getParent().getNext().style.display='';$(this).getParent().style.display='none';">moreLass="view_more" style="display:none;">Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Alto'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  Lass="view_less_link" href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="$(this).getParent().getPrevious().style.display='';$(this).getParent().style.display='none';">less