"Mother, Please Explain", No. 2 from "Bergerettes". Traditional French country song, from a setting by J. B. Weckerlin, arr. John Lewers. English translation by Sigmund Spaeth. Recorded live on Sunday, May 5, 2013, at All Saints Episcopal Church in For... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">moreStyle="display:none;">"Mother, Please Explain", No. 2 from "Bergerettes". Traditional French country song, from a setting by J. B. Weckerlin, arr. John Lewers. English translation by Sigmund Spaeth. Recorded live on Sunday, May 5, 2013, at All Saints Episcopal Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Performed by the Concert Choir ensemble of the Girl Choir of South Florida. ArtiStic Director: Wallis Peterson, AccompaniSt: Gayle Giese. Mother, please explain, what is love? Won't you tell me? Does one feel joy, or is it sad? How am I to know what of late befell me? For now my life no more is glad. Oh, tell me, is loving always kind? Suppose a gentle swain is sighing, Should I be denying? Not long since, to me came a shepherd fair Handsome as could be, and promptly he did swear That he loved me well. How could I tell? How could I tell? If he should come and say the same again, What shall I answer then? What shall I answer then? No one in the village compares with his beauty Whatever he may do or say Is so ful... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">less
Live recording of "A5 vocal ensemble" Concert in Seville, 19th of June of 2016. www.a5vocalensemble.com
lyrics by Jo Cooper This was performed by the RoSthern Junior College Chorale at the FeStival of Choirs Concert with Canadian Mennonite University Singers (cmu.ca) and the Station Singers of RoSthern. FeStival of Choirs Third Avenue United Church ... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">moreStyle="display:none;">lyrics by Jo Cooper This was performed by the RoSthern Junior College Chorale at the FeStival of Choirs Concert with Canadian Mennonite University Singers (cmu.ca) and the Station Singers of RoSthern. FeStival of Choirs Third Avenue United Church Saskatoon, SK March 16, 2014
Gurt Lush Choir singing Sh-Boom at ColSton Hall at the Gurt Gasworks Concert 2012
We are a brand new choir based at St Mary-at-Hill Church in London. We are directed by Robert Mingay-Smith
Back in the USSR John Lennon & Paul McCartney arranged by Daryl Runswick March 17, 2019 Congregational Church of Batavia, IL
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Tenor's Guide) “Weep O Mine Eyes” was firSt published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his firSt collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his moSt popular madrigals, as well as one of the moSt internat... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">moreStyle="display:none;">Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Tenor'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 Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">less
Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Bass' Guide) “Weep O Mine Eyes” was firSt published by composer John Bennet (c. 1575-c. 1610) in his firSt collection of madrigals in 1599. It was one of his moSt popular madrigals, as well as one of the moSt internatio... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">moreStyle="display:none;">Weep, O Mine Eyes - John Bennet (Bass' 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 Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">less
MERRY ChriStmas FROM US ALL!! -- solos: Martha Hayward and Jennifer atkinson -- arranged: Fraser Wilson -- Filmed by Georgia Ball: www.linkedin.com/pub/georgia-ball/3b/5a7/64a at Holy Trinity Church, Sheffield. www.holytrinitymillhouses.co.uk -- www.... Style.display='';$(this).getParent().Style.display='none';">moreStyle="display:none;">MERRY ChriStmas FROM US ALL!! -- solos: Martha Hayward and Jennifer atkinson -- arranged: Fraser Wilson -- Filmed by Georgia Ball: www.linkedin.com/pub/georgia-ball/3b/5a7/64a at Holy Trinity Church, Sheffield. www.holytrinitymillhouses.co.uk -- www.albionchoir.org.uk
That Choir Carols - December 13, 2015 (conducted by Craig Pike) Metropolitan United Church, Toronto ON Recorded by Kris O'Reilley ChriStmas Bells - Gordon Young & Lowell Mason www.thatchoir.com