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video:
MUSE - Cincinnati's Women's Choir sing Bread & Roses
MUSE - Cincinnati's Women's Choir sings "We All Sang Bread and Roses" by Mimi Farina at their International Women's Day Concert on March 2, 2013. Introduction by Angie Denov, Catherine Roma, Diana Porter and Rhonda Whitten. St. Monica - St. George Parish ... moreMUSE - Cincinnati's Women's Choir sings "We All Sang Bread and Roses" by Mimi Farina at their International Women's Day Concert on March 2, 2013. Introduction by Angie Denov, Catherine Roma, Diana Porter and Rhonda Whitten. St. Monica - St. George Parish Newman Center. Shot on Ursula Roma's iPhone.
video:
'Do You Hear the People Sing?' at New Milton Music Festival 2016
This is Gethsemane, one of two performances performed by Do You Hear the People Sing? at New Milton Music Festival on Sunday 20 March 2016, which earned them not only best choir of their category but also best choir overall of the festival. It was arrange... moreThis is Gethsemane, one of two performances performed by Do You Hear the People Sing? at New Milton Music Festival on Sunday 20 March 2016, which earned them not only best choir of their category but also best choir overall of the festival. It was arranged specifically for Do You Hear the People Sing? for the occasion, by their leader, Nicole Dawson
video:
For the Beauty of the Earth | The Girl Choir of South Florida and Saint Mary's College
"For the Beauty of the Earth" by John Rutter. Text by Folliott S. Pierpoint.
Recorded live on Friday, March 15, 2013, at First Presbyterian Church, Pompano Beach, Florida. Performed by the Saint Mary's College Women's Choir and the combined ensembles o... more"For the Beauty of the Earth" by John Rutter. Text by Folliott S. Pierpoint.
Recorded live on Friday, March 15, 2013, at First Presbyterian Church, Pompano Beach, Florida. Performed by the Saint Mary's College Women's Choir and the combined ensembles of The Girl Choir of South Florida. Conductor: Wallis Peterson, Accompanist: Susan Dodd.
http://www.saintmarys.edu/music-womens-choir
video:
Ranpono - Sydney Guillaume {score video}
Recording:
Blue Valley Northwest High School Chamber Singers
Kevin Coker, director...World premiere performance... Southwestern ACDA Conference - March 2016...
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(TRADUCCIÓN AL ESPAÑOL ABAJO)
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[ Yele maoulo! ]
The conch shells are sound... moreRecording:
Blue Valley Northwest High School Chamber Singers
Kevin Coker, director...World premiere performance... Southwestern ACDA Conference - March 2016...
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(TRADUCCIÓN AL ESPAÑOL ABAJO)
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[ Yele maoulo! ]
The conch shells are sounding,
The roosters haven’t crowed yet,
The sun hasn’t risen yet,
The workers are on their feet!
Ranpono has begun!
Laborers, let’s put our hands together,
Let’s join together,
The work has begun!
Little by little, the bird makes its nest.
My brothers, my sisters,
Join together, let’s move forward!
Heads together, in harmony,
We will come to see the navel of an ant.
With perseverance, we will see the navel of an ant.
The load that you bear on your head falls on your shoulders.
Little by little, the bird makes its nets.
[ Yele maoulo! ]
Wasting time is not part of the game.
We must work today to harvest tomorrow.
Work is over!
The sun is setting,
The workers are dismissed,
A job well done.
Ranpono brings life.
Truly indeed... less
video:
evening morning day | Radcliffe Choral Society
"evening morning day" by David Lang. Text from the Book of Genesis 1.
Recorded live on March 16, 2015, at First Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Performed by the Radcliffe Choral Society of Harvard University. Director: Beth Willer.
... more"evening morning day" by David Lang. Text from the Book of Genesis 1.
Recorded live on March 16, 2015, at First Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Performed by the Radcliffe Choral Society of Harvard University. Director: Beth Willer.
The composer writes: "I wanted to make a piece about the creation story but I didn't want to highlight one religion's or culture's narrative over another."
"It was important for me to try to find something universal, something present in all stories, or common to all cultures. I hit upon the idea of making a kind of checklist of everything that needed to be created to get the world to this point, without each individual culture's stories or myths or exoticisms. I went back to the first chapter of Genesis, to see what I could get out of my own culture's story, and I stripped away all the descriptions, adjectives, connectors and motivators. All that is left of Genesis in my text are the nouns, leaving a dispassionate list of everything created, in the order in ... less