St Ann's Church Manchester
Quick unprepared visit to St Annes Church Manchester. Sorry about the quality I am trying to resolve that. Manchester is a wonderful city steeped in history. Come and visit one day!
Apologies for my accent and any mistakes with pronunciation. Also this is not a Catholic Church
EXPLORING MANCHESTER: Inside historic ST ANN'S CHURCH (ENGLAND)
SUBSCRIBE: - St Ann's Church in Manchester, England was consecrated in 1712. Although named after St Anne, it also pays tribute to the patron of the church, Ann, Lady Bland. St Ann's Church is a Grade I listed building.
Saint Annes Church and St Annes Square Manchester U.K
PACHELBEL CANON PERFORMED AT ST ANN'S CHURCH, MANCHESTER - JONATHAN SCOTT (ORGAN SOLO)
Jonathan Scott performs his arrangement of Pachelbel's Canon in D on the organ of St Ann's Church, Manchester. The score of this transcription is available from:
Film and Sound by Tom Scott
For more information about Jonathan Scott and Scott Brothers Duo please visit:
St Ann's Square, Manchester, England
This is a short video clip on a Saturday morning, from St Ann's square , Manchester, England. Street baskers can be seen playing their guitars and breaking the greyiness of the sky
VIERNE - CARILLON DE WESTMINSTER - ORGAN OF HOLY NAME CHURCH - MANCHESTER - JONATHAN SCOTT
Carillon de Westminster by Louis Vierne (1870 -1937) from 24 Piecès de Fantaisie, Suite No III Op. 54, 1927. Performed by Jonathan Scott at the Hill organ of Holy Name Church, Manchester, UK.
Film & Sound by Tom Scott
For more information please visit:
The organ of Holy Name Church, Oxford Road, Manchester UK.
Built in 1871 by William Hill & Son
Rebuilds and alterations: 1902 (unknown), 1928 Ernest Wadsworth, 1950 Jardine & Co
The organ was restored in 2004 by David Wells, Liverpool reversing earlier changes and a new electro-pneumatic action.
Manual Compass 56 notes
Pedal Compass 30 notes
SPECIFICATION
PEDAL
Sub Bass 32
Open Diapason 16
Violone 16
Bourdon 16
Principal 8
Flute Bass 8
Fifteenth 4
Mixture III (17.19.22)
Trombone 16
Ophicleide 16 (1952, from Tuba)
CHOIR
Lieblich Bourdon 16
Open Diapason 8 (1928, originally Clarabella 8)
Gedact 8
Dulciana 8
Salicional 8
Gemshorn 4
Lieblich Flute 4
Flautina 2
Corno di Bassetto (TC)
Clarinet 8
Tuba (1928, 12”)
GREAT
Double Open Diapason 16
Open Diapason I 8 (Added post 1928)
Open Diapason II 8
Stopped Diapason 8
Gamba 8
Principal 4
Harmonic Flute 4
Twelfth 2 2/3
Fifteenth 2
Full Mixture IV (15.19.26.29)
Sharp Mixture III (22.26.29)
Posaune 8
Clarion 4
SWELL (enclosed)
Bourdon 16
Open Diapason 8
Rohr Flute (Originally named Stopped Diapason)
Viol d'Orchestre 8
Voix Celeste 8 (1928, originally Twelfth & Keraulophone)
Principal 4
Suabe Flute 4
Fifteenth 2
Mixture III (17.19.22)
Double Trumpet 16
Horn 8 (Originally named Cornopean)
Oboe 8
Vox Humana 8
Clarion 4
Tremulant
Couplers
Swell to Pedal
Swell to Great
Swell to Choir
Swell octave
Swell suboctave
Swell unison off
Choir to Great
Choir to Pedal
Choir octave
Choir suboctave
Great to Pedal
St Ann's Square Manchester UK
July 1st 2014 St Ann's Square Manchester ... some people and a car ... there will be more of these and I promise they will be duller than this ... I stood in St Ann's Square this morning ...
Meeting German team at St. Ann's Church in Jerusalem
Meeting a German team at the St. Ann's Church, Jerusalem.
St. Ann's church is well known for its beautiful acoustic reverberation. So people used to sing songs in that church to enjoy that sound effect.
This lady introduced herself as the team leader & and a pastor. We told about the German Missionary V Nagal who came to India 120 years back. It was a new knowledge to them, but was a very pleasant moment in our visit.
Pelland Organ Co., St Ann's Church Gloucester
Today Eric and I performed a thorough tuning of this wonderful organ. Eric's sea themed demo shows off the wide variety of voices. Fr. John Kiley looks on. This is the church where the funeral in the
This is St Anne's College
St Anne's College, Oxford:
St Mary's Hidden Gem Church Manchester Nov 2015
St Mary, God, Jesus Christ, Holy Spirit, Hidden Gem,
St.Ann's Street, Manchester
St.Ann's Street, Manchester
Manchester 27th May 2017, St Anns Square
Manchester 27th May 2017, Saint Ann's Square, such a beautiful but so so sad place to be. Born and Bread in Manchester, proud to be a Manc!!!!!!!!!! Lets hope this brings our community's together, not pushes us further apart
st.edward church manchester uk
aarons spl day
Places to see in ( Denton - UK )
Places to see in ( Denton - UK )
Denton is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Tameside, Greater Manchester, England, five miles east of Manchester city centre. Historically part of Lancashire, it had a population of 36,591 at the 2011 Census. Denton probably derives its name from Dane-town, an etymology supported by other place names in the area such as Danehead-bank and Daneditch-bourne. The word 'Dane' is itself derived from Anglo-Saxon denu, dene, daenland, meaning a valley. So literally Denton means valley town.
There is one main war memorial, or cenotaph, in Denton, located in Victoria Park. This memorial commemorates people from Denton and Haughton who served in two world wars. The names on the war memorial were collected from their relatives who wrote to the council with details of their loved ones who served in either war. The war memorial was unveiled on 23 July 1921. Figures from the Denton section of the Tameside council website, state that 3,500 Denton men served in the Great War (1914–1918), of that number, 369 people were killed.
The oldest church in Denton is St. Lawrence's. It is almost 500 years old, originally built in 1531. It is a listed Grade II* building. The church is also known locally as Th'owd Peg (the old peg) due to the fact, as a timber-framed building, it was constructed with wooden pegs rather than nails. It is more commonly known as the black and white church, because of its appearance. A local myth is also said to have a pirate buried within its grounds because of a grave stone marked with a skull and crossbones at its front door. In a more thorough investigation and article printed by Denton Local History Society (1995), it was found that the gravestone was actually a masonic gravestone belonging to a deceased Soldier named Samuel Bromley from the Royal Artillery. The magnificent Victorian St Anne's Church, Haughton, is a Grade I listed building, and is built in the Gothic Revival style.
One of Denton's claims to fame is that, along with Reddish South, it has the UK's least frequent train service, every Friday, in one direction, from Stockport to Stalybridge. There are bus links to Manchester city centre, Hyde, Ashton-under-Lyne and Stockport operated by Stagecoach. The M67 Denton Relief Road motorway was constructed, running east to west through Denton, between 1978 and 1981. Originally this was planned to be part of a motorway running from central Manchester to Sheffield. At its western end the M67 connects with the M60 Manchester Ring Road.
( Denton - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Denton . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Denton - UK
Join us for more :
Test the strength of your crystals , St Ann's Square , Manchester
A soprano lady slicing the air with her beautiful voice at St Ann's Square, Manchester, England
City Church Manchester Video
This video is about a new church starting in the city centre of Manchester in September 2014.
Manchester crowd spontaneously sings Don't Look Back in Anger following minute's silence
Traffic came to a halt in Manchester on Thursday morning as the city paused to observe a minute's silence for those killed in Monday's terrorist attack.
Mancunian's gathered in St Ann's Square for the memorial event, among them Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham, Lord Mayor Eddy Newman, council leader Sir Richard Leese, and Lord-Lieutenant of Greater Manchester Warren Smith.
Gathered around floral tributes, the huge crowd fell silent at 11am - and, after the minute passed, the crowd erupted into a spontaneous rendition of Don't Look Back in Anger by Manchester band Oasis.
Manchester Hill Remembered
In April 2018 we were honoured to host this unique cultural event which saw some of our city’s best and most exciting musicians, artists and new talent rediscover and remember a piece of forgotten Manchester history, in which 79 local lives were lost.
13 emerging artists worked alongside Stuart McCallum, John Ellis, Luke Flowers, Seaming To, Liam Frost and Katie Chatburn. The new music created formed part of a promenade performance at Manchester Cathedral.
Manchester Hill Remembered was presented by Brighter Sound, Manchester Histories and Manchester City Council.
Find out about current events and projects at: brightersound.com
Manchester - St Ann's Square