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1 disque
1 - Timothy ROBERTS
John Blow and his pupils
J. Blow
: A Hymn ; Praise to Our God Proclaim (The Divine Companion, 1701), Voluntary in G (No. 10)* , Cornet Voluntary in G (No. 29) , Voluntary in D minor (No. 6) , Voluntary in C (No. 1), Voluntary in A minor (No. 23) , Double Voluntary in C (No. 24), Voluntary in D minor (No. 8), Voluntary in D (No. 5b) , Voluntary in G minor (No. 17) , Voluntary in D minor (No. 7), Voluntary in G (No. 16), Double Voluntary in D minor (No. 27)
J. Clarke
: An Evening Hymn (The Divine Companion, 1701)
H. Purcell
: Voluntary on Old Hundredth, Voluntary in G
D. Purcell
: O Let My Mouth be Filled with Thy Praise
W. Richardson
: Funeral Anthem for the Use of Charity Children (1729)
J. Reading
: Psalm 8 with prelude and interludes (tune; St John’s, Hackney) , Psalm 100 with prelude and interludes (tune; Old Hundredth)
anonyme (?Blow)
: Voluntary in G minor (No. 60)
- Londres St Botolph without Aldgate
- Disque SFZ music;,
2007, avec 2 sopranos et une basse
The organ at St Botolph's Aldgate in the City of London is a remarkable survival, one of the most reliable witnesses to the sound of English church music of the late 17th and early 18th centuries. It is the oldest surviving English church organ, and the only surviving organ by Renatus Harris. It was built about 1704, when Harris was paid for the Trumpets and Echos (now the Swell). Standing at the easternmost gate of the ancient City of London, the church had not been burnt in the great fire of London of 1666, but was in any case replaced by a new building in 1744, designed by George Dance, in a style similar to Christopher Wren's City Churches. The organ was put into store and re-assembled in the new church by John Byfield, Renatus Harris's son in law. The organ has been rebuilt and altered since then, but the Victorian additions were removed by NP Mander Ltd in 1966. The organ was in 2006 restored to its 1744 state by Martin Goetze and Dominic Gwynn, but with a small pedal organ.
1 disque
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Alain CARTAYRADE
www.france-orgue.fr
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