Sing a New Song - University of Utah Singers video free download


139,920
Duration: 06:09
Uploaded: 2009/09/24

Download this song:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sing-a-new-song/id490639430?i=490639431&uo=4

The University of Utah Singers perform "Sing a New Song" by Ronald Staheli live in concert, September 19, 2009 in Libby Gardner concert hall under the direction of Dr. Brady Allred.

Piano: Laurel Enke & Paul Hill

Comments

9 years ago

Chris Green

Very well done! Fantastic diction and unification of the vowel sounds. Just beautiful!

10 years ago

Ezra Donner

Beautifully done. I actually had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Staheli at ACDA two years ago. Thanks for sharing this video, +Robert Johnson!

10 years ago

Musik HQCH

SUNDAY GREETINGS !

10 years ago

Judith Bluhm

SUNDAY GREETINGS !

10 years ago

Christopher Nicholson

This is why I love to hear the University of Utah Singers. They are absolutely marvelous!! 

10 years ago

leedshunk

Wonderful wonderful singing !!!

10 years ago

Seven Julianus

awesome,,how to get the score of this song? I really like it. 

10 years ago

aroko nagi

Lovely.lovely...great blendin...can anyone send me a sheet music of this song,I wud love my choir to sing this beautiful song,my email id is [email protected]

10 years ago

Jay Nelsestuen

I really like this! Dr. Staheli did such a wonderful job conducting and facilitating Eric Whitacre's work that when I saw this, I just had to take a listen! Beautiful!

11 years ago

TheZSNR

i'm from malaysia..and i verry love yours voice ........ at school i join group choir...i like to singing.

11 years ago

MonzaMan08

Just an FYI, Bach believed that it was a waste of time to write anything other than religious music. He didn't compose that many masses either because he wasn't Catholic, although he wrote one of the greatest Masses ever: Mass in B minor BWV232. Bach used a popular secular style based on opera form for much of his larger sacred works, he was quite avant-garde. It might interest you that during the renaissance, great composers remixed secular songs into religious works frequently.

11 years ago

aurumque8

That is so cool. I'm such a huge lover of choral music that I've stopped listening to that other stuff that's out there today. I love this choir!

12 years ago

alvaro yehudi franco acosta

esta bien fea esa cancion

12 years ago

Anne Boeding

@Leviwosc what's wrong with that? by the way, Bach composed plenty of secular music

12 years ago

Leviwosc

@agrebelamy89: Of course there were. He could have worked as a composer for a renowned orchestra, he could have worked for a royal or imperial family. Bach was good enough, but he chose for the church.

12 years ago

Anne Boeding

@Leviwosc Wasted his talent?! the "other institutes" didn't exist

12 years ago

BlueChoirJere

very like this song.. people indonesian who was muslim,,this time lot of them join choir's and sing religious song's.. anyway, may i know, who's the composer of this song?? is lovely.

12 years ago

Carrie Accounts

@Leviwosc You have some a valid point. I asked because I just don't understand when some people automatically dislike/look down upon music just because of its religious background. I'd like to add that the church often acted as a patron to composers/musicians like Bach and that this support gave them more means to write music. But the past is the past, and I guess the biggest shame is that there aren't more great composers nowadays...

12 years ago

Leviwosc

@194Anonymous: True, you're absolutely right. But I pity that. Look at Johann Sebastian Bach for example. One of the greatest composers in German history. He wasted all his talent and all his life to church, composing masses and other religious music. I get sad, thinking of the idea of what this man could have achieved if he composed works for other institutes than the church. So much potential wasted IMHO. But you're right... lots of great music comes from religious roots.

12 years ago

Carrie Accounts

@Leviwosc Why a pity? If we look back in time, much of the music developed because of religion and some of the best music and composers come from religious roots.

Related Videos