The church is without an organist and the congregation sings along to taped recordings of hymns, which is fine when the right tapes are inserted. |
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The choir of St Martin in the Fields, led by organist and choirmaster, Nick Dankswill, will sing both the Magnificat and the Nunc Dimittis. |
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Mr Walsh, an organist of international repute, had taken legal advice about such a move as the bitter dispute rumbled on. |
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The organist at the centre of a long-running row at a Yorkshire church is set to leave the area and take up a new post in Germany. |
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The son of a clergyman, he was a chorister at St Paul's Cathedral and was subsequently articled to the organist there. |
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For each song of the congregation throughout the worship service, the organist plays the same servant role. |
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People jump up from behind the pews, and a fake wall flips around to reveal a kindly organist at her pipe organ. |
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It has involved the resignation of the cathedral chapter clerk, bursar and organist. |
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A man is accused of taking part in a vicious attack which claimed the life of a former church organist. |
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Nonetheless, he was full of praise for choirmaster and organist at St James's, Bill Thomas, who trained him and oversaw his Halle audition. |
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Organ playing runs in the family as Adam's dad David is organist and choirmaster at St Nicolas' Church. |
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Before I moved to London I spent two years as organist and choirmaster in a South Dublin parish. |
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He had frequent offers for positions under Government, of which the first was that of organist and choirmaster at the Cathedral of Schwerin. |
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A boy only 13 years old has taken over from a respected retired music teacher as church organist and choirmaster. |
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The choir will sing from the High Altar in the Church and will be accompanied by their own organist. |
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Students were allowed to play a piece on the organ, and then the organist performed for them. |
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Countless local churchgoers also knew him as their regular organist and choirmaster. |
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As the cathedral organist, he lived just beside it in a lovely old Georgian house. |
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He was an accomplished organist, owning two impressive electronic instruments. |
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He is a first-class pianist and organist and has composed music and written and published his own poems. |
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In a Lutheran service, there is a minister, a cantor, a servant, and an organist. |
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In 1713 he had become maestro di cappella to the Marchese Stella, succeeding Alessandro Scarlatti, and organist of the viceroyal chapel. |
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From 1692 to 1695 he was organist at Winchester College, and in 1699 he was made a vicar choral and organist of St Paul's Cathedral. |
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The concert ended with a Mass by Bellini in which the organist, choir and soloists gave a magnificent performance. |
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During Mass appropriate hymns were sung by Ann Kavanagh accompanied by organist Donna Roche. |
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At Cambridge he developed an enviable reputation as an organist and choir trainer. |
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Soon the bridesmaids were in their places and the organist started to play the wedding march. |
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The organist began to play a wedding march and the people looked to the back, waiting for the doors to open and the bride to appear. |
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The beautiful choir from St Aiden's N.S. was trained and directed by Vivienne Lee and the organist was her father George Lee. |
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What might be called the dead hand of the Church organist and the academician has lain heavily over music in this country for a great many years. |
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Alice took the young organist, who was also her choirmaster, to meet her father. |
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He was lead singer, guitarist, organist and co-writer of the group's two biggest hits. |
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The organist often crackled or whined the Gregorian-chant hymns and the celebrant often hummed, mumbled, or whispered the Latin prayers. |
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To the right, hidden from the couples' view in the trap door under the stage, the organist is sitting at the Wurlitzer, his jacket as shiny white as his keyboard. |
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Simon Over, organist of St.Margaret's, Westminster and already one of the UK's most capable young accompanists and operatic repetiteurs, makes his operatic conducting debut. |
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I remember standing at the church door waiting for the organist to start playing and as the first notes of the wedding march began I walked up the aisle on my father's arm. |
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He became a pupil of the cathedral organist, who gave him a thorough training as a composer and as a performer on keyed instruments, the oboe and the violin. |
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He soon became our church organist and also helped with the church choir. |
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That was issued jointly by Mr Morley and the cathedral Dean and Chapter, the body which, headed by the beleaguered dean, runs the minster and employs the organist. |
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Wolff traces his development as organist, composer, cantor, court musician and teacher, culminating in Bach's 27 years as cantor and music director in Leipzig. |
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Special thanks to the organist and choirs in both churches and to the children's choir from St. Fiacc's NS and the young musicians from Killeshin. |
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I was also a church organist and choirmaster in Whitechurch in Rathfarnham, and a part-time music teacher, teaching piano, Leaving Cert Musicianship and choir. |
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As the organist plays the Prelude and Fugue in E Flat by Bach, the bells of the Abbey will be rung half-muffled to a peal of Stedman Caters, comprising 5101 changes. |
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In 1831 he moved to Rome as organist to the Prussian ambassador. |
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In the faint light we rose and sang hymns, accompanied by the organist sitting comfortably on the floor and using his right leg to pump the harmonium. |
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Witness, especially, Tomas absorbed, dreamfully, in the fugue played by the organist at school. |
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The two minor canons as well as the organist and Master of the Choristers are most directly concerned with liturgical and ceremonial matters. |
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Although the organ was not his preferred instrument, the only post he ever held for an annual salary was as a church organist and choirmaster. |
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By December 1977, Jane had met organist Jonathan Hellyer Jones when singing in a church choir. |
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On his return Holst obtained his first professional appointment, aged seventeen, as organist and choirmaster at Wyck Rissington, Gloucestershire. |
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Around this time, he made his first public appearances as a violinist and organist. |
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Handel's father engaged the organist at the Halle parish church, the young Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow, to instruct Handel. |
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In 1679, Blow, who had been appointed organist of Westminster Abbey in 1669, resigned his office in favour of his pupil. |
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Byrd's first known professional employment was his appointment in 1563 as organist and master of the choristers at Lincoln Cathedral. |
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Musicians included Benedict de Opitiis, Richard Sampson, Ambrose Lupo, and Venetian organist Dionisio Memo. |
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In September 2015, Adrian Bawtree was appointed second assistant organist, a position that replaced the organ scholarship. |
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She was the staff organist at Bosk Funeral Home, Fitchburg, for over 40 years. |
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Liz Pearson was the organist, Kim Howe read the lesson and Peter Pearson was sidesman. |
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The minster's first organist, in 1766, was William Herschel, who discovered the planet Uranus. |
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Thomas', Toronto, was at one time the parish church of the English accompanist Gerald Moore, who was an assistant organist there. |
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It is recorded that in 1463 John Kegewyn was organist of Salisbury Cathedral. |
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The organist of the People's Church in Zurich is recorded as weeping upon seeing the great organ broken up. |
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The one jazz organist I almost always enjoy, though his latest records are dull and pandersome. |
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From 1861 to 1872, he supplemented his income by working as a church organist and music teacher, and writing hymns and songs. |
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Typically, this would be a harpsichord player, a pipe organist or a luteist or theorbo player. |
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As the abbot is an internationally renowned harpsichordist and organist, we were delighted when he invited us to his music room to hear a few pieces of Bach. |
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After Holst left school in 1891, Adolph paid for him to spend four months in Oxford studying counterpoint with George Frederick Sims, organist of Merton College. |
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Mary Magdalene in Toronto was the home parish of the organist and composer Healey Willan, who composed much of his liturgical music for its choirs. |
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The church was empty, and the organist was playing by himself on an old-fashioned organ that sounded like the piped hurdy-gurdies of the beginning of the nineteenth century. |
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The organist, a sensitive and far-seeing person, had a printout of the traditional version of Eternal Father distributed with the Order of Service. |
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Much has been lost, including librettos, volumes of accounts and receipts, and documents for the competitions for maestro di cappella and organist. |
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As a five-year-old, she was taught to sing by the organist at her church in North Wales and now, aged 22, she has enjoyed worldwide success for her Bhangra music. |
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There are Charles Wood, Maurice Bevan and a lovely Mass by George Malcolm and some organ extemporisations by organist Matthew Martin and conductor Martin Baker. |
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The current organist and master of the choristers is David Flood and his assistant organist, who is also director of the girls' choir, is David Newsholme. |
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Ton Koopman is a Dutch conductor, organist and harpsichordist. |
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He was chosen for the organist post over more than 150 other applicants. |
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Despite his thorough contrapuntal training in London and Leipzig, as well as his experience as a church organist, Sullivan rarely composed fugues. |
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The event saw Gosforth head teachers lifted up 110ft by a cherry-picker, while their pupils watched from below and sang carols alongside an organist. |
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