"Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee Peace be within thy walls, and prosperity within thy palaces For my brethren and companions’ sakes, I will now say, Peace be within thee Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek thy good" Now more than ever!
Astounding piece in Bb major six part harmony with incredible major sixth chords and a sterling bass line. I sing alto in a church choir and have perfect pitch. The top Bb to finish is beyond my range, even in childhood. The ending is really phenomenal!
It's so sad and yet surreal that you guys in the UK will hear this hymn in its original context for the first time in 70 years and with double Vivats - Vivat Regina Camilla and Vivat Rex Carolus. Though I'm Polish, I'm sure our TV will broadcast their coronation and I'll definitely watch it. And rest in peace Regina Elisabetha, you've already met the King of kings.
@@johanndominik2032 nah, in this case we use Nominativus since vivat is the predicate and Carolus is the subject. If vivat was in in imperative, then it would be Carole in Vocativus but it's not in this case
its comforting to see so many views on such a beautiful piece. im glad i am not alone in my reverence for such great music... im 21 and i love this sort of music.
I am 54 and moved to tears by such heart on sleeve music like this. As a Christian of long-standing and amateur musician and singer, I know what I'm talking about!
Why are English people so quick to consider Händel English, but almost never acknowledge the right of Eastern European, Pakistani or Arab immigrants to become truly British over time (even the second, third generation)? Just sayin'.
@@Zik2 The answer is, that's simply not true. Anyone who truly integrates into English society is considered English. That doesn't mean creating a Muslim commune in Tooting, that means doing as the Romans do when in Rome. Everyone who has integrated has been treated the same as any other Englishman, as the black community here in Kent can testify.
Watching the very young Elizabeth walk down the Abbey to be crowned to this glorious music and shouts of Vivat Vivat sends shivers through me. Wonderful, powerful, uplifting music.
My father was finishing his National Service in 1953, aged twenty. Mother was nearly seventeen and a grammar school sixth former at the time, so both old enough to remember it very well!
At 2:15 it says: "Jerusalem is builded as a city that is at unity in itself." My heart begins to pound when I hear that. I love this Psalm and Parry's composition for it.
It's about the Holy of Holies as a Unity, the presence of God in the New Jerusalem. Just cried through it!! Singing it on Sunday during Queen's Jubilee Platinum celebration.
@@rivenoak Indeed, if anything is going to be played...if push comes to shove, they'll delete everything but this, Zadok the Priest, and, of course, God Save the King.
I am not old enough to remember Vivat Rex before this occasion as I am only 54! My mother who is 88, certainly does remember that occasion as a nearly 17 year old Grammar school sixth former!
I had never heard of this tune until William and Kate's wedding. I absolutely adore this and cannot stop listening to it. When listening to this, it sends shivers down my spine.
@Raunak Chatterjee It wouldn't be vivat regina Catharina, Catherine will be the Queen consort not Queen. I will be vivat rex and what ever William's regnal name will be.
@@disinterestede The Westminster School will shout, and the choir will follow, first with "Vivat Regina Catharina" (as she will precede her husband in the procession, being the consort; then with Vivat Guglielmus Rex (or whatever version of Latinization William choses - he has little reason for changing anything for his regnal name). It might be worth looking up the 1937 coronation of George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) to see this. We will not see this with Charles and Camilla, as she will not become queen on his accession (barring some shift in popular opinion; mind you, she's been married to him longer than Diana was.) How she will recognized beyond simply the King's wife remains to be seen.
The glory of God doesn't come into it (and why does the glory get a capital letter??), but rather the remarkable development in the expectations in the ears - and, behind those, the brains - of Europeans from the 12th century on, and the state those expectations were in at the moment when Parry sat down to write this (sorry, I don't actually KNOW that he sat down to compose...) - when the future of these particular harmonic progressions was (seen retrospectively, now) DOOMED! Nothing in Parry implies, or (more ambitiously) entails the existence of the individual you mention.
@@julianwynne8705I must respectfully disagree with you, Julian. Being an amateur musician and singer in a church choir, I understand choral harmony very well and think that this piece is staggering in its melodies. Real heart on sleeve music such as this can only have a divine origin. And I am a Christian!
I've been privileged to sing this piece twice in recent years as part of a large choir (albeit without the Vivats). It's just as thrilling to sing as to listen to, especially when, like me, you are a First Soprano and you get to soar up into the rafters. It's a fabulous piece of music!
Heavenly. Liturgical music is the greatest glory of European choral culture. I am a classical composer dedicated to church music, and I hope, with my works, to bring people closer to the divine, the beauty, the consolation.
One of THE greatest pieces of music ever written. I'm lucky enough to have conducted this for both His Holiness the Pope in the Vatican and the Late Queen, Elizabeth II too. There is little better than this in the world of music. Still gives me goosebumps x
Sir Charles Hubert Parry, certainement l'un des compositeurs Britanniques les plus importants. J'apprécie particulièrement la musique Britannique et je dis haut et fort 'Bonjour les Britanniques'.
I remember fondly singing this in c choral society with a music teacher in the 60s. She was incredibly encouraging, and asked us if we wanted to sing the "Vivats" - of course we all did even if it wasn't any royal occasion. It's one of the most brilliant musical memories that I have with her (Margaret Hedger if anyone remembers her).
@@brucehutchison3946 this is a beautiful piece of music. I am reading the biography of Queen Victoria and read this was played at her coronation . I had never heard of it, so, I thought I would try to find it on TH-cam. I was pleasantly surprised. It made what I was reading come alive . I can't even imagine all the excitement and what was going through the minds of all the witnesses that day .
@@deborahkelly1489 I don't know what you were reading but you have been misinformed. Queen Victoria's coronation was in June 1838 nearly ten years before Parry was born. He composed "I Was Glad" for the coronation of King Edward VII in 1902
Dave Barclay Dave, Thank you for the history lesson, I didn’t know that. I love British history and read lot of autobiography ‘s I just this very day gstarted reading book on Sir Winston Churchill . I have traveled all over the world and have had the pleasure to see many of the places mentioned .
Such a stirring piece in Bb major with the voices raised in six part harmony. Great bass line and major sixths as well as the organ swelling to a crescendo. Outstanding!
Wonderfully performed at today's (May 6, 2023) coronation for Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla for Their procession: From the published liturgy: "The anthem ‘I was Glad’ is a version of Psalm 122. It has been used at the Entrance of the Monarch since at least 1626. The celebrated setting by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry (1848-1918) composed for the Coronation of Edward VII in 1902 includes the cry ‘Vivat Rex!’ (Long Live The King!) which is, by tradition, loudly proclaimed by scholars from Westminster School. Throughout the service you will hear the familiar cries of ‘God save King Charles’, ‘God save The King’ or ‘Long Live The King’. These are in themselves a form of prayer calling upon God to protect The King."
There's a great line in the play 'The Audience' about the Queen where she says her coronation was a more important feeling even than her wedding day or motherhood. Obviously we don't know if Her Majesty actually said that, but this music imparts to me at least something of that sensation.
1 I was glad when they said to me, "Let us go to the house of the LORD!" 2 Our feet have been standing within your gates, O Jerusalem! 3 Jerusalem-built as a city that is bound firmly together, 4 to which the tribes go up, the tribes of the LORD, as was decreed for Israel, to give thanks to the name of the LORD. 5 There thrones for judgment were set, the thrones of the house of David. 6 Pray for the peace of Jerusalem! "May they be secure who love you! 7 Peace be within your walls and security within your towers!" 8 For my brothers and companions' sake I will say, "Peace be within you!" 9 For the sake of the house of the LORD our God, I will seek your good. - Psalms 122
Oh for that glorious day when the Lord Jesus shall return and come through the Eastern gate into the city Jerusalem which He wept over. The Jewish Messiah, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. He is alive forevermore
ghughesarch well that comment sure put a dampener on things here. You will be very sad one day that you believed that the Truth is a lie!! God bless you.
Until relatively recently, each European country had its own national method of pronouncing Latin. Remnants of this can be heard in English Legal Latin (such as "Habeas corpus"). Italian ambassadors to Pre-Reformation England reported that they could barely understand the Latin they heard in English churches. The reason ecclesiastical Latin often sounds Italian today is because Pope Pius X (1903-1914) desired that the Catholic Church universally use one pronounciation - the one used in Rome.
A glowing and rousing piece of Pomp and Circumstance like only English composers could produce. And Parry certainly was not the least of them ! Why he is not considered a top-drawer composer is quite beyond me.
for the curious: it is a privilege to do the vivat during coronation and it is vested in the scholars of Westminster School. wow i wrote the comment 8 years ago and now we wait just 10 days and will hear it in all its splendor.
When Kate and William got married in 2011 this is actually the song that Kate walked down the isle to (minus the vivats of course😊), and towards the end when they hit the high note on plentiousness is when she made it to the end of the isle and ultimately to her (at the time soon-to-be) husband. Just a fun fact!😊👑
It has always been my ambition to sing this with a full orchestra and a huge choir, with the Vivats. Somewhat ironic, given that I am a Marxist! I have always loved listening to and singing music such as this; it's just so well written!
U of Illinois Catholic chapel organ was rededicated after a prolonged rebuild, about 1989, and I was among the tenors when we sang this for the occasion (without the Vivats of course). Lots of ringers from the School of Music involved, and the late great Thomas Schleis at the organ. Quite an experience for a chorister.
There are three English ways of pronouncing Latin: until c 1900 we pronounced it as though it was English - this survives in Latin words and phrases used in ordinary speech (et cetera, vice versa, for example) and by lawyers - and here ( vivat pronounced vie-vat). Then the schools and universities adopted a pronunciation believed, probably rightly, to be closer to what spoken Latin actually sounded like (vivat becomes weewut). And there's Latin as spoken by the Catholic Church - pronounced as though it was (modern) Italian (vivat pronounced vee-vut) - don't know about nowadays, but in my youth always used by English choirs singing Latin texts.
I was fortunate to be part of a choir in which we sang this beautiful psalm in commeration of the queens anniversary of her coronation and it has always been one of my favourite pieces that we sang under the guidance of one of the young men who was a member of the choir at our queens coronation jean
Indeed. And at Westminster (School), whose King's Scholars actually sing the coronation vivats, all three are used. In class and for A Levels and the performance of the regular Latin Play, the pronunciation believed to be that of the Romans is used. In the School's regular Latin Prayers, at the Commemoration of Benefactors and of course at Coronations (including the next one when it will be 'Vivat Rex Carolus'), the Anglicised pronunciation is used. And I imagine any school choir singing mediaeval or baroque Latin anthems would use the Italianate variant.
"Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love thee
Peace be within thy walls, and prosperity within thy palaces
For my brethren and companions’ sakes, I will now say, Peace be within thee
Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek thy good" Now more than ever!
That opening is just so majestic.
The I was glad opening ties with the RVW Sea Symphony and Handel Zadok the priest as the most exciting choral entrances ever written!
I keep on repeating the opening
lol ok fascist
Oh hey, it's you again
Astounding piece in Bb major six part harmony with incredible major sixth chords and a sterling bass line. I sing alto in a church choir and have perfect pitch. The top Bb to finish is beyond my range, even in childhood. The ending is really phenomenal!
It's so sad and yet surreal that you guys in the UK will hear this hymn in its original context for the first time in 70 years and with double Vivats - Vivat Regina Camilla and Vivat Rex Carolus. Though I'm Polish, I'm sure our TV will broadcast their coronation and I'll definitely watch it. And rest in peace Regina Elisabetha, you've already met the King of kings.
What lovely sentiments, Pawel.
@@johanndominik2032 nah, in this case we use Nominativus since vivat is the predicate and Carolus is the subject. If vivat was in in imperative, then it would be Carole in Vocativus but it's not in this case
@@pawejabonka5095 Oh, you are completely right. Thanks.
Wouldn’t it be Vivat Rex Carolus Tertius? Or is the number not used?
@@campbellmays9900 I think it's not used, vivats for George VI were simply "vivat Rex Georgius", not "Georgius Sextus"
Imagine in heaven they make even better music ....✨
its comforting to see so many views on such a beautiful piece. im glad i am not alone in my reverence for such great music... im 21 and i love this sort of music.
APM11
Heck, I’m A LOT younger than 21 and I LOVE big choral music!!!
I'm 70 and especially love this anthem...even sang it a few times over the years in this, that, or the other choir.
I am 54 and moved to tears by such heart on sleeve music like this. As a Christian of long-standing and amateur musician and singer, I know what I'm talking about!
As an American, I think the English know better how to do things majestically and this composition is a perfect example.
713davidh42
Approved by another American 100%
713davidh42 English are part of a Kingdom and USA isn’t so that is indeed very true.
Do you mean the united states? America is a whole continent included by several countries
@TheRenaissanceman65 His influence is evident in Holst and Vaughan Williams.
Exactly
We English are so modest about our composers. Parry isn't Mozart or Beethoven, but he is a good composer - at times achieves real greatness.
Elgar, Purcell, Britten, Walton, Finzi (my favourite)...
hermoglyph 22 Kate liked it enough to use it as her processional.
@@jeanparke9373 Holst, Arne, Handel (he's ours Germans!), there are loads.
Why are English people so quick to consider Händel English, but almost never acknowledge the right of Eastern European, Pakistani or Arab immigrants to become truly British over time (even the second, third generation)? Just sayin'.
@@Zik2 The answer is, that's simply not true. Anyone who truly integrates into English society is considered English. That doesn't mean creating a Muslim commune in Tooting, that means doing as the Romans do when in Rome. Everyone who has integrated has been treated the same as any other Englishman, as the black community here in Kent can testify.
Watching the very young Elizabeth walk down the Abbey to be crowned to this glorious music and shouts of Vivat Vivat sends shivers through me. Wonderful, powerful, uplifting music.
My father was finishing his National Service in 1953, aged twenty. Mother was nearly seventeen and a grammar school sixth former at the time, so both old enough to remember it very well!
At 2:15 it says: "Jerusalem is builded as a city that is at unity in itself." My heart begins to pound when I hear that. I love this Psalm and Parry's composition for it.
I get exactly the same reaction, well put!
It's about the Holy of Holies as a Unity, the presence of God in the New Jerusalem. Just cried through it!! Singing it on Sunday during Queen's Jubilee Platinum celebration.
"Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem" from Psalm 122 is the best line of all.
@@jm08050 Yes, and it's a constantly urgent task.
This is the most majestic piece of music that simply must be played at the King's coronation
Glorious!
no sweat: Parry's piece has a safe spot on the list
It is.
@@rivenoak Indeed, if anything is going to be played...if push comes to shove, they'll delete everything but this, Zadok the Priest, and, of course, God Save the King.
Except it'll be Vivat Regina Camilla and Vivat Rex Carolus.
We'll get to hear this lovely piece tomorrow! Vivat Rex! (For the first time in over 70 years)
Vivat Regina Camilla! Viva Rex Carolus! Vivat! Vivat! Vivat!
I am not old enough to remember Vivat Rex before this occasion as I am only 54! My mother who is 88, certainly does remember that occasion as a nearly 17 year old Grammar school sixth former!
I had never heard of this tune until William and Kate's wedding. I absolutely adore this and cannot stop listening to it. When listening to this, it sends shivers down my spine.
This was also played at Diana and Charles' wedding too
@Raunak Chatterjee It wouldn't be vivat regina Catharina, Catherine will be the Queen consort not Queen. I will be vivat rex and what ever William's regnal name will be.
@@disinterestede The Westminster School will shout, and the choir will follow, first with "Vivat Regina Catharina" (as she will precede her husband in the procession, being the consort; then with Vivat Guglielmus Rex (or whatever version of Latinization William choses - he has little reason for changing anything for his regnal name). It might be worth looking up the 1937 coronation of George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) to see this. We will not see this with Charles and Camilla, as she will not become queen on his accession (barring some shift in popular opinion; mind you, she's been married to him longer than Diana was.) How she will recognized beyond simply the King's wife remains to be seen.
@@kellyvaters1689 Thank you for the explanation, it is all very interesting how things are done in big royal ceremonies
@@disinterestede at the coronation, vivat was sung for Queen Camilla and King Charles
Magnificent! Superlative! God glorifying!!! Amen!!!
Oh my!!! Total goosebumps. Next years coronation will be a wonderful spectacle. ❤️
God Bless Elizabeth II, and all those peoples, across the Globe, who love her!
A majestic musical piece for a majestic Savior!
This is exuberantly beautiful to the Glory of God!
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
The glory of God doesn't come into it (and why does the glory get a capital letter??), but rather the remarkable development in the expectations in the ears - and, behind those, the brains - of Europeans from the 12th century on, and the state those expectations were in at the moment when Parry sat down to write this (sorry, I don't actually KNOW that he sat down to compose...) - when the future of these particular harmonic progressions was (seen retrospectively, now) DOOMED!
Nothing in Parry implies, or (more ambitiously) entails the existence of the individual you mention.
Also, the last, well, roughly ten or fifteen bars are VERY disappointing; the beginning is by far the best part - alas, not 'kept up'.
@julianwynne8705 well this song is singing about God, is it not?
@@julianwynne8705I must respectfully disagree with you, Julian. Being an amateur musician and singer in a church choir, I understand choral harmony very well and think that this piece is staggering in its melodies. Real heart on sleeve music such as this can only have a divine origin. And I am a Christian!
I've been privileged to sing this piece twice in recent years as part of a large choir (albeit without the Vivats). It's just as thrilling to sing as to listen to, especially when, like me, you are a First Soprano and you get to soar up into the rafters. It's a fabulous piece of music!
It would be my dream
Heavenly. Liturgical music is the greatest glory of European choral culture. I am a classical composer dedicated to church music, and I hope, with my works, to bring people closer to the divine, the beauty, the consolation.
May God work in you through your talent!!!!! 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
I would love to hear some of your music.
@@susanmoran5226 Thank you so much for your interest. This is my channel, where I will be soon uploading a new motet: th-cam.com/users/WFerdinand
@@wferdinandofficial I look forward to it.
Beautifully done. Thanks to all who contributed to this masterpiece.
God Bless her majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. Long may she reign!
And she did reign for 10 more days...
@@pawejabonka5095😢
The Vivats are always my favorite very exciting to hear it at King Charles' coronation next month :D
This was always my favourite to sing with the choir I hope to have it at my wedding 💕
One of the greatest choral entrances ever written along with Handel Zadok the Priest and RVW Sea Symphony Behold the sea itself
Michael Heintz I have so much love for the Sea Symphony. One of the most underrated pieces of music ever
Zadock the Priest is AMAZING
the most beautiful piece of music ever
Oh my goodness, this piece gave me both goosebumps and elation! Wow!
I cry every time during the Vivats. I can't help it! Vivat Regina Elizabetha!
rooster
@@setokaiba7303 chicken
@@steveharley5181 duck
@@markomoko_o pigeon
One of THE greatest pieces of music ever written. I'm lucky enough to have conducted this for both His Holiness the Pope in the Vatican and the Late Queen, Elizabeth II too.
There is little better than this in the world of music.
Still gives me goosebumps x
Sir Charles Hubert Parry, certainement l'un des compositeurs Britanniques les plus importants.
J'apprécie particulièrement la musique Britannique et je dis haut et fort 'Bonjour les Britanniques'.
It has become history after Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II passed away. So emotional 😢 May her heir make a good king. God save the King
Sang this spectacular Anthem back in the 50s when in the Choir at Clifton College with the one arm Douglas Fox on Organ. Fantastic.
Hearing this song as the entrance hymn for King Charles III's coronation was very moving indeed, #VIvatReginaCamilla #VivatRexCarolus
the opening brings one to tears every single time
I remember fondly singing this in c choral society with a music teacher in the 60s. She was incredibly encouraging, and asked us if we wanted to sing the "Vivats" - of course we all did even if it wasn't any royal occasion. It's one of the most brilliant musical memories that I have with her (Margaret Hedger if anyone remembers her).
Epic truly Epic. Perhaps the most epic tune ever.
One of my favourites - beautifully sung - stirring and regal - fit for The Queen!
Beautiful. I was holding my breath almost to the end. I did not want to miss any note.
Thanks for this.
Sir Charles out-Elgar'ed Sir Edward on this one. Just magnificent. And an excellent performance!
More percussion, please! In particular crash cymbals, suspended cymbal, tam-tam, triangle, chimes, bells, and snare rolls
can't get enough of this!
May God save Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second and long may she continue to reign.
Carl-Hein Jeneke
Vivat Regina!
Here here!
@@brucehutchison3946 this is a beautiful piece of music. I am reading the biography of Queen Victoria and read this was played at her coronation . I had never heard of it, so, I thought I would try to find it on TH-cam. I was pleasantly surprised. It made what I was reading come alive . I can't even imagine all the excitement and what was going through the minds of all the witnesses that day .
@@deborahkelly1489 I don't know what you were reading but you have been misinformed. Queen Victoria's coronation was in June 1838 nearly ten years before Parry was born. He composed "I Was Glad" for the coronation of King Edward VII in 1902
Dave Barclay Dave, Thank you for the history lesson, I didn’t know that. I love British history and read lot of autobiography ‘s I just this very day gstarted reading book on Sir Winston
Churchill . I have traveled all over the world and have had the pleasure to see many of the places mentioned .
Can’t wait to hear this tomorrow
So regal.This is beautiful.Words cannot describe this music.Has to be heard to appreciate it.
Really love this. And I’m a Filipino. Please don’t destroy your wonderful monarchy. Protect it at all cost.
Exactly what I’m thinking too!
Love this!
Such a stirring piece in Bb major with the voices raised in six part harmony. Great bass line and major sixths as well as the organ swelling to a crescendo. Outstanding!
Needs more cymbals
To have sung anthems like this is something extraordinary, I'm so glad🙏
Can't wait to hear that during the coronation of Charles III.
Absolutely incredible piece of music.
One of my favourite piece ever.
Vivat, Regina!
Vivat Regina Elizabetha!
Vivat! Vivat! Vivat!
I know! So cool!
Wonderfully performed at today's (May 6, 2023) coronation for Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla for Their procession: From the published liturgy: "The anthem ‘I was Glad’ is a version of Psalm 122. It has been used at the Entrance of the Monarch since at least 1626. The celebrated setting by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry (1848-1918) composed for the Coronation of Edward VII in 1902 includes the cry ‘Vivat Rex!’ (Long Live The King!) which is, by tradition, loudly proclaimed by scholars from Westminster School.
Throughout the service you will hear the familiar cries of ‘God save King Charles’, ‘God save The King’ or ‘Long Live The King’. These are in themselves a form of prayer calling upon God to protect The King."
This is the finale fanfare for our marching show this year :) it's the coronation of the Queen
There's a great line in the play 'The Audience' about the Queen where she says her coronation was a more important feeling even than her wedding day or motherhood. Obviously we don't know if Her Majesty actually said that, but this music imparts to me at least something of that sensation.
I think it could be like that for her seeing as anyone can get married and any woman can have a baby but not that many can get crowned!
@@pix046 You're quite right, and the scale of responsibility is different
Was waiting for the last note in soprano and it was well executed
1 I was glad when they said to me, "Let us go to the house of the LORD!"
2 Our feet have been standing within your gates, O Jerusalem!
3 Jerusalem-built as a city that is bound firmly together,
4 to which the tribes go up, the tribes of the LORD, as was decreed for Israel, to give thanks to the name of the LORD.
5 There thrones for judgment were set, the thrones of the house of David.
6 Pray for the peace of Jerusalem! "May they be secure who love you!
7 Peace be within your walls and security within your towers!"
8 For my brothers and companions' sake I will say, "Peace be within you!"
9 For the sake of the house of the LORD our God, I will seek your good. - Psalms 122
I personally have song a different version of this psalm with different lyrics.
Wow! Incredible composition in Bb major with a top Bb to finish!
Love this. Singing it is a total joy!!
To the 96 who don't like this I extend my best wishes to you . It must be awful to have no Soul !
They must like Justin Bieber and all that.
Or no taste in music
@@frenetic1057 Taste all in the mouth.
I have sung this so many times and it makes me like it lots
Superb and wonderfully executed!
Este hino é espetacular, principalmente com as variações no início "I was glad", a breve pausa e o arranjo do órgão.
Vivat Rex Carolus!
Looking forward to next year when we will hear Vivat Regina Camilla and Vivat Rex Carolum.
Finally I found this version with Vivat Regina Elizabetha!
Best version on youtube.
Beautiful.
Genuinely, thank you for that little excerpt: it's nice to be able to pick up on all these little, informative details!
Even though we are not a world power this song was truly written with Gods grace. It is truly powerful! God save the Queen 🏴🇬🇧
A wonderful music and excellent performance! 👏💖
What an amazing thing! Thank you so much for posting this.
Absolutely, beautiful.
O pray for the peace of Jerusalem, they shall prosper that love thee. Peace be within thy walls.
Yes, as long as Jerusalem is demarcated between East and West.
pix046 You know, Jerusalem should return for the jewish hands, It's biblical.
Let's keep praying for the peace
Oh for that glorious day when the Lord Jesus shall return and come through the Eastern gate into the city Jerusalem which He wept over. The Jewish Messiah, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. He is alive forevermore
Oh for the glorious day when everyone stops believing all that utter shite.
ghughesarch well that comment sure put a dampener on things here. You will be very sad one day that you believed that the Truth is a lie!! God bless you.
Until relatively recently, each European country had its own national method of pronouncing Latin. Remnants of this can be heard in English Legal Latin (such as "Habeas corpus"). Italian ambassadors to Pre-Reformation England reported that they could barely understand the Latin they heard in English churches. The reason ecclesiastical Latin often sounds Italian today is because Pope Pius X (1903-1914) desired that the Catholic Church universally use one pronounciation - the one used in Rome.
This piece and the Psalm meant so much the first Sunday our congregation was able to meet again in person.
Christ reigns!
2:53 to 3:10 my favourite sequence. I can still see the smiling face of Kate Middleton.
not kate , william , kate is a consort queen . Vivat Rex William "
2:53-3:12 is definitely my favorite especially hearing all the Circlr of 5ths with the inner notes meshing with the melodic line.
VIVAT REGINA CAMILLA! VIVAT REX CAROLVS!
A glowing and rousing piece of Pomp and Circumstance like only English composers could produce. And Parry certainly was not the least of them ! Why he is not considered a top-drawer composer is quite beyond me.
Such a grand old chestnut! I had it sung at my wedding.
the music of glory!
Glorious Gloriana! Vivat Regina Elizabetha!
for the curious: it is a privilege to do the vivat during coronation and it is vested in the scholars of Westminster School.
wow i wrote the comment 8 years ago and now we wait just 10 days and will hear it in all its splendor.
And nobody looking for the right pronunciation of it😢
@@trollvet for Edward VII. they did proper latin but since those days it is english latin and butchered
Simply beautiful
Splendid!
I’ve been lucky enough to sing this many times and never tire of it. It’s still stunning.!
I love the organ part!
Used at the coronation of Charles the 3rd .I am no longer a formal Christian but I love this Psalm
3:50 OMG 😍 i love that part, and the beginning, in my opinion this is the best wedding entrance song
When Kate and William got married in 2011 this is actually the song that Kate walked down the isle to (minus the vivats of course😊), and towards the end when they hit the high note on plentiousness is when she made it to the end of the isle and ultimately to her (at the time soon-to-be) husband. Just a fun fact!😊👑
Wow very fine music. Thank you for the upload.
AWESOME I like to much!👏👏👏👏👏
It has always been my ambition to sing this with a full orchestra and a huge choir, with the Vivats. Somewhat ironic, given that I am a Marxist! I have always loved listening to and singing music such as this; it's just so well written!
Vivat Regina Elizabetha I - Vivat Regina Elizabetha II -Vivat Rex Charles - Vivat Rex William
U of Illinois Catholic chapel organ was rededicated after a prolonged rebuild, about 1989, and I was among the tenors when we sang this for the occasion (without the Vivats of course). Lots of ringers from the School of Music involved, and the late great Thomas Schleis at the organ. Quite an experience for a chorister.
gets the hairs on my neck standing up just amazing sang this as a chorister back in the early 80s me know how to put on the pomp !
Nice to hear an arrangement where the Altos and Basses aren't completely drowned out.
Oh this brings me back to the royal wedding! I was there! really! xo - Queen Dilly Dally
So excited to sing this
Imagining the arrival of soon-to-be King Charles III on his coronation😍👑
Vivat Rex Carolus
There are three English ways of pronouncing Latin: until c 1900 we pronounced it as though it was English - this survives in Latin words and phrases used in ordinary speech (et cetera, vice versa, for example) and by lawyers - and here ( vivat pronounced vie-vat). Then the schools and universities adopted a pronunciation believed, probably rightly, to be closer to what spoken Latin actually sounded like (vivat becomes weewut). And there's Latin as spoken by the Catholic Church - pronounced as though it was (modern) Italian (vivat pronounced vee-vut) - don't know about nowadays, but in my youth always used by English choirs singing Latin texts.
I was fortunate to be part of a choir in which we sang this beautiful psalm in commeration of the queens anniversary of her coronation and it has always been one of my favourite pieces that we sang under the guidance of one of the young men who was a member of the choir at our queens coronation jean
Indeed. And at Westminster (School), whose King's Scholars actually sing the coronation vivats, all three are used. In class and for A Levels and the performance of the regular Latin Play, the pronunciation believed to be that of the Romans is used. In the School's regular Latin Prayers, at the Commemoration of Benefactors and of course at Coronations (including the next one when it will be 'Vivat Rex Carolus'), the Anglicised pronunciation is used. And I imagine any school choir singing mediaeval or baroque Latin anthems would use the Italianate variant.
It is the correct Westminster Latin pronounciation as spoken by the Queen Scholars of Westminster School (in the real Coronation).
It has the same effect on me too! Stirring stuff.
How can you hear this and not cry?