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Let's talk choral music.

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doombilly:

--- Quote from: pwhodges on 24 Mar 2013, 10:42 ---Here's another concert:

German Romantic Church Music

Program:

Brahms - Geistliches Lied
Mendelssohn - Veni Domine
Mendelssohn - Verleih uns Frieden
Mendelssohn - Hear my Prayer
Reger - Toccata and Fugue in D minor
Rheinberger - Abendlied
Bruckner - Te Deum

--- End quote ---
Currently drowning out the 'Superhits of the 70's and 80's.'
Thanks PWHODGES!

pwhodges:
Gosh, you're going back a bit!  Glad to know that it's still appreciated, though.

pwhodges:
I returned from holiday a couple of hours before my choir sang a concert - so I couldn't sing, but recorded it as usual.  It was called "Parry and his pupils", and consisted of works by Parry and several early twentieth-century English composers.  But as well as that concert, I'm letting you access all my recordings of the choir, in both stereo and 4.0 surround (except just the three earliest).

https://cassland.org/CherwellSingers
login: cherwell
password: singers

Someone also videoed part of the concert, so here's the video with my audio (there are three audio tracks - my stereo, my 4.0 surround, the camera's):
https://cassland.org/videos/20180701%20Cherwell%20Singers%201st%20July%202018%20(Parry%20-%20Blest%20pair%20of%20sirens).mp4
Most browsers will automatically play this (but only with the default audio track) rather than download; in Chrome and Opera, there is a download button at the right-hand end of the video control bar. Or you can download this zipped version.

Tova:
Thank you very much. I look forward to enjoying them.

I would be most interested in some technical details of how the recordings were obtained, if you wouldn't mind sharing them. Particularly the equipment used, microphone placement, and any post-processing steps.

pwhodges:
Up-to-date description, but still under development here: https://tetrahedral.audio/
Older (updating slowly), but relevant to earlier concerts here: https://ambisonic.info/practical.html

Here is a newly made short documentary about the early work of Michael Gerzon, the inventor of the "Ambisonics" technique of recording I use.  I was a friend of his at university, and appear in the video a couple of times (my voice is also the second you hear, and the microphone in the opening shot is mine):

//www.youtube.com/watch?v=X23hZNoSkUs

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