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The Carols for Choirs series of carol books features arrangements of the carol by both Sir David Willcocks and John Rutter. Organist Simon Preston and former conductor of the Choir of King's College, Cambridge , Sir Philip Ledger , have also written arrangements that the choir have performed at the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols in recent ...
John Rutter interviewed by Alan Macfarlane, 28 January 2009 (video) on YouTube; John Rutter interviewed by C Music TV, October 2010 Archived 6 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine from C Music TV; This is the Day, performed at the royal wedding, 2011; Interview with John Rutter, 11 July 1991
The group cites its influences the Hi-Lo's vocal jazz group, [13] [14] the Comedian Harmonists, [14] the Mastersingers [14] and (perhaps most importantly) the style of singing instilled into them by Sir David Willcocks, their director of music at King's College, Cambridge. It was this serene and precise sound, with vibrato used only as a colour ...
Christmas Lullaby is a popular sacred choral composition by John Rutter, a lullaby for Christmas. He wrote his own text, beginning "Clear in the darkness", [1] three stanzas with the refrain "Ave Maria" ("Hail Mary"). [2] Rutter scored the piece for four vocal parts and piano, adding other versions. [3]
The Cambridge Singers is an English mixed voice chamber choir formed in 1981 by their director John Rutter with the primary purpose of making recordings under their own label Collegium Records. The group initially comprised former singers from the Choir of Clare College, Cambridge , where Rutter had previously been the music director.
Christmas Night (subtitled Carols of the Nativity) is a Christmas-themed album by The Cambridge Singers conducted by John Rutter. Most songs are sung a cappella , on others the choir is accompanied by The City of London Sinfonia .
Short Christmas movie quotes “Seeing isn’t believing; believing is seeing.” — Charlie, “The Santa Claus 2" "But sir, Christmas is a time for giving ... a time to be with one’s family.”
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