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Author Topic: Ralph Vaughan Williams' most influential work on music?  (Read 405 times)
time_is_now
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« Reply #15 on: 14:10:30, 28-08-2008 »

the SP and S in the Sally Army.


http://www.sps-shop.com/ukt/spnsshop.nsf/default.html
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The city is a process which always veers away from the form envisaged and desired, ... whose revenge upon its architects and planners undoes every dream of mastery. It is [also] one of the sites where Dasein is assigned the impossible task of putting right what can never be put right. - Rob Lapsley
Don Basilio
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Era solo un mio sospetto


« Reply #16 on: 14:22:49, 28-08-2008 »

I get the impression that the Sally Army has been left behind in Evangelical musical circles, as the preferred ensemble is not a brass band, but a rock group.  Graham Kendrick rather than Moody and Sankey.

When the mass was translated into current English, I remember a galumphing setting of the Gloria by John Rutter.  At my church we sing a mass setting by David Thorne, Mass of St Thomas.  It's quite sweet.
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To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.
A time to weep, and a time to laugh: a time to mourn, and a time to dance
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