Prince Charles and wife Camilla (titled as the Duke and Duchess of Rothesay in Scotland) put on their kilts for a visit to the Highlands. The royal couple visited the Highland Games on Thursday and met those who were badly affected by floodwater from the River Dee and Muick last December, with locals praising Charles for his support behind the scenes. Raymond and Susan Cooper are still living in rented accommodations after their home was hit by floodwater reaching four-and-a-half feet in depth. "The house itself is a no-go area at the moment, but we're hoping to move back in before Christmas,...
- 8/12/2016
- by Simon Perry, @SPerryPeoplemag
- PEOPLE.com
Prince Charles and wife Camilla (titled as the Duke and Duchess of Rothesay in Scotland) put on their kilts for a visit to the Highlands. The royal couple visited the Highland Games on Thursday and met those who were badly affected by floodwater from the River Dee and Muick last December, with locals praising Charles for his support behind the scenes. Raymond and Susan Cooper are still living in rented accommodations after their home was hit by floodwater reaching four-and-a-half feet in depth. "The house itself is a no-go area at the moment, but we're hoping to move back in before Christmas,...
- 8/12/2016
- by Simon Perry, @SPerryPeoplemag
- PEOPLE.com
It was another year full of great classical music. Here are my favorites from 2014, new releases only, no reissues.
1. Magnificat/Philip Cave The Tudors at Prayer (Linn) This superbly programmed and performed album contains eight Latin sacred choral works (specifically motets, mostly votive antiphons and psalm motets) by John Taverner (c.1490-1545), Thomas Tallis (c.1505-1585), William Mundy (c.1529-1591), Robert White (c.1538-1574), and William Byrd (c.1540-1621). Active during the period of greatest religious upheaval in English history, they kept writing richly layered polyphony despite changing fashions (though the later composers listed would also provide chordal English-language anthems as needed). The mightiest work here, Mundy's Vox Patris caelestis, leads off the program. The text, speaking as it does of "flowering vines" and their "heavenly ambrosial scent," practically begs for an elaborate polyphonic setting, and Mundy provided one that is among the most exquisite works of the 16th century.
1. Magnificat/Philip Cave The Tudors at Prayer (Linn) This superbly programmed and performed album contains eight Latin sacred choral works (specifically motets, mostly votive antiphons and psalm motets) by John Taverner (c.1490-1545), Thomas Tallis (c.1505-1585), William Mundy (c.1529-1591), Robert White (c.1538-1574), and William Byrd (c.1540-1621). Active during the period of greatest religious upheaval in English history, they kept writing richly layered polyphony despite changing fashions (though the later composers listed would also provide chordal English-language anthems as needed). The mightiest work here, Mundy's Vox Patris caelestis, leads off the program. The text, speaking as it does of "flowering vines" and their "heavenly ambrosial scent," practically begs for an elaborate polyphonic setting, and Mundy provided one that is among the most exquisite works of the 16th century.
- 12/28/2014
- by SteveHoltje
- www.culturecatch.com
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