Immagine dell'autore.
180+ opere 405 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Opere di Mormon Tabernacle Choir

Joy to the World (1990) 16 copie
It's Christmas (1989) 11 copie
Peace Like a River (2004) 9 copie
God Bless America (1992) 8 copie
Ring Christmas Bells (2009) 7 copie
Songs of the Civil War (1992) 7 copie
Spirit of America (2003) 6 copie
Sing Choirs of Angels (2004) 5 copie
Rejoice & Be Merry (2008) 5 copie
The Wonder of Christmas (2006) 5 copie
Rejoice and be merry! (2008) 4 copie
Songs from the American Heartland — Choir — 4 copie
Voices in Harmony (2006) 3 copie
Once Upon a Christmas (2012) 3 copie
Silent Night (1981) 2 copie
Consider the Lilies (2003) 2 copie
Brahms: Requiem (1999) 2 copie
O Come Little Children (2017) 2 copie
The Lord's Prayer (1959) 2 copie
Let the Season in (2014) 2 copie
Curtain Up 2 copie
He Is Risen (2014) 2 copie
Keep Christmas with You (2015) 2 copie
Silent night 1 copia
This Is the Christ (2011) 1 copia
Nativity Story [VHS] (1996) 1 copia
Hallelujah! (2016) 1 copia
Showtime! 1 copia
Christmas Gloria (1998) 1 copia
An American Tribute (1986) 1 copia
Men of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir — Performer — 1 copia
Serenade 1 copia
A Merry Little Christmas (2018) 1 copia
Praise the Man (2009) 1 copia
Amazing Grace (1996) 1 copia
Down Memory Lane (1990) 1 copia
Noel 1 copia
Sing Unto God 1 copia
Ambassadors 1 copia
Rock of ages 1 copia

Opere correlate

Noël (2007) — Collaboratore — 95 copie
My Christmas [2008 album] (2009) — Collaboratore — 41 copie
Bach: Greatest Hits (1994) — Choir — 10 copie
Ring Christmas Bells — Actor — 4 copie
The Great Songs of Christmas (Goodyear Album Three) (1999) — Collaboratore — 3 copie
A Sibelius Festival [sound recording] (1965) — Performer — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Sesso
n/a
Nazionalità
USA
Premi e riconoscimenti
National Medal of Arts (2003)

Utenti

Recensioni

I love patriotic music. My eyes tear up when I'm at events and it is performed. Imagine my joy at finding this recording. From the opening of America the Beautiful to the closing of Call of the Champions, this is a superb collection. I love the inclusion of hymns and folk songs.

There are so many good songs that it is hard to choose my favorites. The arrangement of Bound for the Promised Land has to be the best I've heard. No one does Battle Hymn of the Republic better than the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. God of Our Fathers, Whose Almighty Hand is beautifully sung. Who could resist George M. Cohan with Cohan's Big Three (Yankee Doodle Dandy, Give My Regards to Broadway, and You're a Grand Old Flag)? Not I!

New to me were Distant Land; They, the Builders of the Nation; Hymn for America (written for the CD), and The Pledge of Allegiance (also written for the CD).

If you enjoy patriotic music, this is a must have!
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Jean_Sexton | Jan 8, 2017 |
If I could have only one recording by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir (and that would be a great shame), it definitely would be this one. It was one of the very first LP's I ever purchased, and long one of my favorites. Unfortunately, it is not available on CD and my original copy is now damaged with use, so it was with considerable pleasure that I located a used one in very good condition. I shall treasure it all my life, and if my family does not have it playing in the background at my wake, I'll haunt them from then on.

There are ten selections on this recording, and together they make a remarkable concert. Each one develops the theme of "brotherhood" with pathos and yearning, with determination and pride. Besides the old faithfuls (in arrangements that are subtly original but still comfortably familiar) -- Rudyard Kipling's "Recessional" set to music by Reginald de Koven, "God of Our Fathers" with a soaring soprano descant, the Navy hymn "Eternal Father, Strong to Save" -- besides these, there are a number of less well known pieces, some by well known composers, all of them inspiring with just a hint of modern dissonance. "Ballad of Brotherhood" grows out of the work of Walt Whitman with allusions to several poems from Leaves of Grass, memorable for the bold chant, "Open road, open road" that underlines the tribute to US heroes. As a companion, the quiet, gripping Whitman poem, "Two Veterans," about a father and son, both slain in the Civil War, is set to music as a dirge by Gustav Holst, with a vivid melody, expressive dissonance from a male chorus, and the incessant beating of drums. Side One concludes with sections from Ralph Vaughan Williams' Thanksgiving for Victory, with treble voices as of a children's chorus singing the prayer that begins, "Father in Heav'n, who lovest all / O help Thy children when they call." The song concludes with the soft, haunting coda, "The Lord shall be thy everlasting light, / And the days of thy mourning shall be ended."

But, for me, the absolute highlight of the album is on Side Two: the Pilgrim's Chorus from Wagner's Tannhauser. The pulsating theme of earthly passion is played on the organ with increasing intensity as the pilgrims sing their homecoming hymn, concluding "Of hell and death I have no fear. / My gracious Lord is ever near," then the triumphant "Hallelujah! Hallelujah, eternally!, eternally!" One cannot but be moved by the power and grace of these words and contrapuntal melodies.

But perhaps the most vibrant statements of the central theme are also on Side Two: John Greenleaf Whittier's "O Brother Man" is simple and elegant. "O Brother man! fold to thy heart thy brother; / Where pity dwells the peace of God is there; / To worship rightly is to love each other, / Each smile a hymn, each kindly deed a prayer." The selection chosen as the finale is Jean Sibelius' "Onward, Ye Peoples." As the notes suggest, this might well become a World Hymn of Brotherhood. It is charged with hope ("Onward, ye people, strive for the Light! / The Light that the Lord has given us for our guide") but also calm reassurance with the call of a heavenly choir from Mount Neboh ("Salem! Salem! Hark they call us / Upward and on to our Father's home."

I shall have this music digitized as quickly as possible, so that I can play it over and over again. In times like these -- Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Katrina, Haiti, the BP oil spill, the political nastiness in DC and hateful prejudice spewing across the land (against homosexuals, immigrants, the jobless and homeless, progressives, President Obama) -- in times like these, the sense of family, of brotherhood and sisterhood, seems lost beyond the horizon. These songs and hymns are a quiet but insistent reminder of who we are and the heights we could reach as a people. Salem! Salem!
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
bfrank | Jul 7, 2010 |

Liste

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
180
Opere correlate
10
Utenti
405
Popolarità
#60,014
Voto
3.8
Recensioni
2
ISBN
29
Lingue
1

Grafici & Tabelle