Originally posted by ahinton
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I was glad
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI think that this is fair enough, if a little generous to Parry, though I still don't quite see why he should be thought of as the "English" anything, particularly given the Welsh origins of his surname!...
As far as 'the English Brahms' goes, Parry would probably have been shocked and embarrassed that anyone would have thought so. He was nonetheless a fine composer, whose music is often more distinctive than that of some of his contemporaries (Stanford, Cowen and Mackenzie, for instance, all of whom wrote fine music).
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI think that this is fair enough, if a little generous to Parry, though I still don't quite see why he should be thought of as the "English" anything, particularly given the Welsh origins of his surname!...Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostWelsh/British?
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Ahinton's absolutely right. Parry was Parry, who happened to be English*. He was neither Brahms nor an imitation of Brahms.
* He was descended from Joan Parry, the midwife who delivered Anne Boleyn of the Princess Elizabeth. Another Parry ancestor, whose name I forget, was Queen Elizabeth's chaplain, who gave her the last rites. The most directly Welsh connexion I know was that Lady Maud was daughter of the Earl of Pembroke.Last edited by Pabmusic; 11-06-12, 12:39.
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Originally posted by Roger Judd View PostHaving dug out my copy of the 1902 service (as you do!) I can confirm that Vivat Regina Alexandra! Vivat Rex Edwardus! was sung/shouted by the scholars of Westminster School. Alexandra got one set of Vivats, Edward got two. The 1902 version of the intro to the anthem is the same length as the revised 1911 version, but musically totally different - the earlier one has a rather sombre air to it rather than festive or ceremonial.
RJ
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Difficult to do without the music, but here goes. Vi-vat Re-gi-na A-lex-an-dra! starts on the 1st beat c,q, sqrest, sq,q,q,q,q,c,c. Vi-vat Rex Ed-ward-us! again starting on the 1st beat, all crotchets, and, yes, he is spelt with a W. Between the vivats for the Queen and the King the trumpet fanfare, which for her is in G, goes up a tone, to A, for him - thereafter all is as usual. Hope that makes sense.
RJ
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIt would be good if ff could arrange some music-writing facility so we could post thumbnail sketches in m/s. OTOH.....
or even
and
[ Ed: Bit doubtful about copyright position on sheet music. I've replaced the [IMG] code by [URL] for the moment.
ff ]
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