You deserve an award for a travel video that doesn't include endless over-caffeinated and hyped-up narration! Thank you so much for this. I usually have to mute these things.
Thanks for posting. Was there in July. Lovely part of the world. Stopped in Wolfville to hear the organ in Manning Memorial Chapel, also at two other rural churches.
Thank you Robert - we have been doing the big "vacancy" churches of Germany, France, Italy recently and will soon return to Nova Scotia in the fall - given our age, probably avoiding the churches and graveyards, but to find the ceilidh and family suppers. DB.
That "Breton Tune" mentioned in the credit, the first tune is called "Saint Patrick's An Dro", a traditional Breton song (despite its English title). A variant of the name "En dro" or "the tune" in Breton makes more sense.
Dear lover of woodwinds: Thanks for your sharp ear - I try to do the honourable thing in using/publicizing the musical efforts of those who allow their work to be used through the Creative Commons. If a title seems derivative, that is an issue for the copyright police, of which I am not an agent. I do note that the tune I attributed has a very close relative in "Saint Patrick's An Dro" and I notice a performance in archive.org by one Carlos Núñez 2003. If one is derivative of the other, I am an insufficient musical scholar to attribute the origins or the replications thereof. D.
Excellent video...thanks for sharing.
So nice of you DB
You deserve an award for a travel video that doesn't include endless over-caffeinated and hyped-up narration! Thank you so much for this. I usually have to mute these things.
Thanks for posting. Was there in July. Lovely part of the world. Stopped in Wolfville to hear the organ in Manning Memorial Chapel, also at two other rural churches.
Thank you Robert - we have been doing the big "vacancy" churches of Germany, France, Italy recently and will soon return to Nova Scotia in the fall - given our age, probably avoiding the churches and graveyards, but to find the ceilidh and family suppers. DB.
Gr8 work,67th like👍
That "Breton Tune" mentioned in the credit, the first tune is called "Saint Patrick's An Dro", a traditional Breton song (despite its English title). A variant of the name "En dro" or "the tune" in Breton makes more sense.
Dear lover of woodwinds: Thanks for your sharp ear - I try to do the honourable thing in using/publicizing the musical efforts of those who allow their work to be used through the Creative Commons. If a title seems derivative, that is an issue for the copyright police, of which I am not an agent. I do note that the tune I attributed has a very close relative in "Saint Patrick's An Dro" and I notice a performance in archive.org by one Carlos Núñez 2003. If one is derivative of the other, I am an insufficient musical scholar to attribute the origins or the replications thereof. D.
Wow