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Ave Verum Corpus

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Uploaded by on Jun 19, 2007

(rehearsal at NCH)
composer: William Byrd
conductor: 聶焱庠 Yen-hsiang Nieh
performers: 台北市大直高中合唱團
2006 逍遙遊 at National Concert Hall, Taipei

Category:

Music

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 5 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (larafans)

  • lol the conductors funny

  • It was in rehearsal.

  • I LOVE your blend----and the ABSENCE of vibrato!

    The colors your achieve are glorious

    Keep posting !

    thank you!!!

    you're marvelous!

  • I have added some clips of annual concert in this year recently. Hope you will like them!

  • Very Beautiful!

  • Thanks!

Top Comments

  • i dont know why, but asian people can sing classical music great! i mean, listen to lilium! My choir sang this in our towns courthouse and the whole town came to listen to us! I SHAT BRICKS

  • Very nice voice !!!

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All Comments (27)

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  • asians are good at everything!!

  • Thank you for this lovely rendition of Byrd!

  • My musical terminology might not be the greatest but my argument still remains

  • Not quite a musical argument ;-)

  • Just the speed throws off everything. I would slap this conductor in the face!!!

  • which break down..., sorry

  • Do you mean their pronounciation is poor, or do you mean it's not understandable because of the tempo ?

    I think everyone of us can speak and understand much quicker than that (and Italian people twice as fast) :-)

  • Agreed.

    In this time music wasn't just made of sounds, it was made of musical sentences - which beark down when sung to slowly.

  • it's still too fast....i don't think God would understand the Latin they are singing. I've sang this song before with other chorales. Trust me slower is the way to go. Besides this song was written for resonance within church walls not raceways

  • No it's not; don't think long note values written in this time meant slow tempo;

    our modern whole note was called semibreve, which was twice shorter than the breve which is the square note (two whole notes)... and it was called breve, meaning short !!

    Admittedly this story was a way before Byrd, I've just exagerated somewhat to explain the general idea.

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