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Page "Augustinians" ¶ 28
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choir and outdoor
In Poland in 1990, a young Polish woman named Weronika ( Irène Jacob ) is singing at an outdoor concert with her choir when a sudden downpour causes the singers to rush for cover.
The dulcian is a flexible instrument, capable of being loud enough to play in outdoor bands, quiet enough for chamber music, and expressive enough to join in with the choir.
The Bandstand situated in Vale Park is a popular outdoor music venue, hosting a variety of acts, typically an orchestra or choir every Sunday.

choir and dress
The abbess also traditionally adds a pectoral cross to the outside of her habit as a symbol of office, though she continues to wear a modified form of her religious habit or dress, as she is unordained-not a male religious-and so does not vest or use choir dress in the liturgy.
In the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church, the choir dress of a bishop includes the purple cassock with amaranth trim, rochet, purple zucchetto ( skull cap ), purple biretta, and pectoral cross.
However, the traditional choir dress of Anglican bishops is quite different from that of their Catholic counterparts ; it consists of a long rochet which is worn with a chimere.
Théodore Adrien Sarr | Cardinal Sarr with a ferraiolo, and wearing a red cassock, but not the rest of the choir dress
Cardinals Walter Kasper ( left ) and Godfried Danneels ( right ) wearing their choir dress: scarlet ( color ) | scarlet ( red ) cassock, white rochet trimmed with lace, scarlet mozetta, scarlet biretta ( over the usual scarlet zucchetto ), and pectoral cross on cord.
When in choir dress, a Latin-rite cardinal wears scarlet garments — the blood-like red symbolizes a cardinal's willingness to die for his faith.
An Anglicanism | Anglican priest in choir dress
There is a distinction between the colour of the vestments worn by the clergy and their choir dress, which with a few exceptions does not change with the liturgical seasons.
On weekdays that are not major feasts Vespers features hardly any ceremonies and the celebrant wears the usual choir dress.
The Death of St. Bede, the monastic clergy are wearing surplices over their cowl s ( original painting at Ushaw College | St. Cuthbert's College, Ushaw ). Seminarian vested in a pleated Roman-style surplice with lace inserts, holding a thurible. An Anglicanism | Anglican priest wearing a cassock, academic dress # Hood | academic hood, English-style surplice, and tippet as his choir dress.
As part of the choir dress of the clergy, it is normally not worn by prelates ( the pope, cardinals, bishops, monsignori, and some canons )-instead, these clerics wear the rochet, which is in fact a variant of the surplice.
In choir dress, chaplains of His Holiness wear their purple-trimmed black cassocks with a cotta, but bishops, protonotaries apostolic, and honorary prelates use ( with a cotta or, in the case of bishops, a rochet and mozzetta ) cassocks that are fully purple ( this purple corresponds more closely with a Roman purple and is approximated as fuchsia ) with scarlet trim, while those of cardinals are fully scarlet with scarlet trim.
Non-Eucharistic vestments are typically referred to as " choir dress " or " choir habit ", in the Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and Anglican churches, because they are worn for the chanting of the Daily Office, which, in the West, takes place in the choir rather than the sanctuary.
In choir dress the cross is gold with a green rope, red for cardinals.
It is held by a chain ( or cord in choir dress ) around the neck and rests on the chest.
The use of the biretta has not been abolished as a result of changes in the regulation of clerical dress and vesture following the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council and still remains the correct liturgical headgear for those in Holy Orders whilst ' in choir ', but its use has been made optional.
Worn as part of mess dress and formerly as the school uniform of boys under 5 ' 4 " at Eton College until 1976 and at many other English schools, particularly choir schools
They may use a purple cassock as their choir dress for liturgical events of special solemnity.
* Apostolic Protonotaries de numero ( and other superior prelates of the offices of the Roman curia who are not bishops and who, as indicated above, may be addressed as Most Reverend Monsignor ) have the same dress as other Apostolic Protonotaries, but wear the mantelletta in choir and a black biretta with a red tuft.
The Venerable Frederic Baraga in Bishop ( Catholic Church ) | episcopal choir dress # Roman Catholic choir dress | choir dress, holding his Dictionary of the Otchipwe Language

choir and is
Ambrose is traditionally credited but not actually known to have composed any of the repertory of Ambrosian chant also known simply as " antiphonal chant ", a method of chanting where one side of the choir alternately responds to the other.
A musical child, he sang in the boys ' choir at the Salzburg Cathedral where he is believed to have taken music lessons with Michael Haydn.
A cappella ( Italian for " in the manner of the church " or " in the manner of the chapel ", also see gospel music and choir ) music is specifically solo or group singing without instrumental sound, or a piece intended to be performed in this way.
Bishop Kallistos Ware says, " The service is sung, even though there may be no choir ...
The string section in a multi-sectioned orchestra is referred sometimes to as the “ string choir .”
The harp is also a stringed instrument, but is not a member of or homogenous with the violin family and is not considered part of the string choir.
Though the anthem of the Church of England is analogous to the motet of the Roman Catholic and Lutheran Churches, both being written for a trained choir and not for the congregation, it is as a musical form essentially English in its origin and development.
In northern and central Sardinia, the dance is lively and animated with leaps and agile movements and usually accompanied by a choir of three or more singers in the center of the circle.
The suite which includes a Scottish pipe band, Irish and Welsh harpists, Galician gaitas, Irish uilleann pipes, the bombardes of Brittany, two vocal soloists and a narrator is set against a background of a classical orchestra and a large choir.
It is said that at this time he instituted a perpetual service of praise, known as laus perennis, by which choir succeeded choir, both day and night ( Montalembert, Monks of the West II, 405 ).
On the south side of the altar via the ambulatory ( an aisle surrounding the end of the choir or chancel of a church ) is a stairway climbing to Calvary ( Golgotha ), traditionally regarded as the site of Jesus ' crucifixion and the most lavishly decorated part of the church.
The second, smaller dome sits directly over the centre of the transept crossing of the choir where the compas, an omphalos once thought to be the centre of the world ( associated to the site of the Crucifixion and the Resurrection ), is situated.
In Search of the Pharaohs is a 30-minute cantata for narrator, junior choir and piano by composer Robert Steadman, commissioned by the City of London Freemen's School, which uses extracts from Carter's diaries as its text.
This is usually done by having a set of jacks for each choir, and a mechanism for " turning off " each set, often by moving the upper register ( through which the jacks slide ) sideways a short distance, so that their plectra miss the strings.
In Oxford, it is traditional for May Morning revellers to gather below the Great Tower of Magdalen College at 6: 00 am to listen to the college choir sing traditional madrigals as a conclusion to the previous night's celebrations.
The all-male student choir is named UFDA The Choir Boys and was established in 1986.
There is currently a memorial ledger stone in the choir of the Cathedral, as well as a stone plaque on the bridge where his remains were allegedly thrown into the Soar.
This arrangement is said to have derived from an early Parliament which was held in a church choir.

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