Word: handels
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...Coast Guard Band will begin the service at 6:45 with a 15-minute prelude. Numbers will include "Vigor in Aidius" with a baritone solo by James Joyce and Handel's "Largo...
...Glee Club opened the concert with the singing of Handel's "Lot the Celestial Concerts All Unite," accompanied by Caldwell Titcomb '47 at the piano. Paul Tibbetts '45, baritone, sang a solo, "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silent." Later in the program, the Radcliffe group joined with the Glee Club in singing several numbers, including some Latin American selections. At the conclusion of the Yard "sing," the audience joined with the two musical groups in singing several of the College songs...
...Choral Finale of Beethoven's Ninth (played by low strings). After a break for announcement of the occasion, the orchestra should swing into the complete choral finale. The rest of the program should consist of music from various United Nations: China; Britain (represented preferably by German-born Handel's Hallelujah Chorus); France (represented in part by Belgian-born Cesar Franck's Pièce Heroique); Russia (Shostakovich and Tchaikovsky); the U.S. (America the Beautiful, the old European psalm-tune Old Hundred, Home Sweet Home and Ballad for Americans...
...Glee Club under the direction of Harold Schmidt opened the concert with "Let Your Celestial Concerts All Unite" from the oratorio "Judas Maccabeus" by George Frederick Handel, rendered with the usual precision but without the usual roundness of tone. In the second number, "Gentle Johnny", and English folk song arranged for men's chorus, the tone was much better and the meaning of each line came out with the expressiveness, characteristic of the English type of melody. The best, however, of the first half of the program was "Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence", and old French melody arranged...
Inventing hobbies of great men is an other O'Nolan pastime. Ardent biographers of the composer Handel were surprised to learn that their idol was such a close student of Parisian slang that he had written an authoritative work on the subject: Handel's L' Argot...