Herbert Brewer: Difference between revisions
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*{{NoCo|Evening canticles in F}} ( [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.mid}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.cap}} Capella] ) | *{{NoCo|Evening canticles in F}} ( [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.mid}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Evening_canticles_in_F_Brewer.cap}} Capella] ) | ||
{{ScoreError|In bar 20 of the Nunc dimittis, the third word should be 'be', not 'the'.}} | |||
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Revision as of 14:13, 1 May 2012
Life
Born: June 21, 1865, Gloucester, England.
Died: March 1, 1928, Millers Green, Gloucester, England.
Arthur Herbert Brewer started his musical career as a chorister in Gloucester Cathedral, where he was a pupil of organist Charles Lloyd. He attended the Cathedral School and Exeter College, Oxford. He served as organist at St. Catherine’s and St. Mary de Crypt, Gloucester (1881), and at St. Giles’ Church, Oxford (1882). He received the first organ scholarship to the Royal College of Music (1883), and was organ scholar at Exeter (1883). He later played the organ at Bristol Cathedral (1885); St. Michael’s, Coventry (1886); Tonbridge School (1892), and Gloucester Cathedral (1896).
View the Wikipedia article on Herbert Brewer.
List of choral works
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- I heard the bells ( )
- Magnificat and Nunc dimittis in D (2 editions available)
- Evening canticles in F ( [ Capella] )
- Possible error(s) identified. Error summary: In bar 20 of the Nunc dimittis, the third word should be 'be', not 'the'.
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Publications
External links
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