The Star Spangled Banner Mormon Tabernacle Choir Utah Symphony 2002 Winter Olympics
Alex Boyé Sings With Mormon Tabernacle Choir at Pioneer Day Concert in Utah
“I don’t sing with my hands behind my back sitting on a chair. I give everything,” said singer Alex Boyé, who was feeling right at home during the annual Pioneer Day concert with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square. “Like a grand homecoming,” said the former choir member, who sang to a large crowd during “Music for a Summer Evening” in the Conference Center on Temple Square in downtown Salt Lake City Friday night, July 14, 2017.
The concert kicked off with a tribute to the Mormon pioneers who arrived in the Salt Lake Valley 170 years ago, July 24, 1847. Songs included “They, the Builders of the Nation” and “Faith in Every Footstep.”
Boyé recalled spending time near Brigham Young’s grave while living near the Salt Lake Temple in downtown Salt Lake City for about eight years. The native of London, England, expressed appreciation for pioneers. “You’re blazing trails that people have not done, and that’s what really encapsulates The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” he explained.
The evening performance included several show tunes such as “Where You Are” from Disney’s “Moana” and a selection of African-American Spiritual songs, including Boyé’s signature rendition of “I Want Jesus to Walk With Me.”
“The music that I do now is pop music with an African twist,” described Boyé, a style perfect for the trio of songs from “The Lion King” that he performed at the end of the concert, including “He Lives in You,” “Endless Night” and “Circle of Life.”
【K】USA Travel-Salt Lake[미국 여행-솔트레이크]몰몬 태버너클 합창단/Mormon Tabernacle choir/Utah/Temple Square
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
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[한국어 정보]
솔트레이크시티를 방문하는 관광객들이 가장 많이 찾는 곳은 템플광장에 있는 솔트레이크 성전이다. 우리에겐 몰몬교로 알려져 있지만 정식 명칭은 예수그리스도 후기성도교회. 이 교회의 중심이 되는 사원이 솔트레이크 성전이다. 1893년에 완성된 이 아름다운 건축물을 보기 위해 교회 회원뿐 아니라 전 세계에서 관광객이 찾아온다. 성전은 결혼이나 세례 등 특수 목적 이외에는 방문을 할 수 없어 관광객을 위해 특별히 미니어처 형태의 모형을 공개한다. 7천 명을 수용하는 돔형의 태버내클. 유타 심포니오케스트라의 메인 연주 장소이기도 했던 태버내클은 60미터 밖에서도 핀 떨어지는 소리가 들릴 정도로 음향시설이 잘 돼 있다고 한다. 167년 전통의 몰몬 태버내클 합창단이다. 그동안 그래미상과 에미상 수상 외에도 미국 대통령 취임식에 단골로 초청을 받아 레이건 전 대통령이 ‘미국의 합창단’이라고 불렀을 정도로 명성을 얻고 있다. 그래서인지 오디션 경쟁률이 300대 1이 넘는다고 한다.
[English: Google Translator]
Where most tourists are looking to visit Salt Lake City is Salt Lake Temple on Temple Square. We have formally known as the Mormons, but the name of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This temple which is the center of the Salt Lake Temple of the Church. This beautiful building was completed in 1893 as a member of the Church brings tourists from all over the world as well. The temple is particularly unveils a model of miniature form for the tourists can not visit except for special purposes, such as marriage and baptism. 7,000 of the domed Tabernacle to accommodate the guests. The main place to play Tabernacle was also naekeul Utah Symphony Orchestra is that the acoustics so good gotta hear the sound of falling pins are outside the 60 meters. 167 years of tradition is the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Meanwhile, Grammy and Emmy Award in addition to the regulars invited to the inauguration of US President Reagan has earned a reputation enough to have called it the American choir. So whether this competitive audition and that more than 1 300.
[Information]
■클립명 :아메리카017-미국24-12 몰몬 태버너클 합창단/Mormon Tabernacle choir/Utah/Temple Square/The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints/Symphony Orchestra
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고 : 김서호 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing : KBS Seoho Kim TV Producer)
■촬영일자 : 2014년 9월(September)
[Keywords]
북아메리카,North America,북미,미국,United States of America,America,USA,김서호,2014,9월 September
Salt Lake LDS (Mormon) Temple
Peaceful aerial video of the Salt Lake LDS temple in Salt Lake City, Utah just after sunrise.
Shot 100% on the GoPro Hero3 Black Edition with the DJI Phantom 2, Zenmuse H3-3D Gimbal, ImmersionRC Tx, and Black Pearl Monitor... all quite epic.
Song: Dramatic Strings by Ricky Valadez
Shot in 2.7K at 24fps and edited in Final Cut Pro X
Star Spangled Banner vs. Mormon Tabernacle Choir
Our national anthem doesn't really sound like that. This arrangement has 7ths from Stravinsky & a repeat of the final verse.
Never forget the absolute dead silence when that flag was brought out, but it wasn't until much later that we could record HD. The dead silent introduction was omitted from the rebroadcast in 2004.
Inside the World of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir
From |
You can hear music coming from this building in the center of Salt Lake City, Utah. It is the Salt Lake Tabernacle, also called the Mormon Tabernacle. This is the home of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Scott Barrick is general manager of the choir.
SCOTT BARRICK: The choir traces its roots back to 1847, when the first Mormon pioneers came into the Salt Lake Valley. There was a conference of the church three weeks after that first band arrived. And there was a choir. And they sang at that meeting. And ever since, there has been a standing choir at the church headquarters here in Salt Lake City.
The choir has 360 members. Every one of them belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Each one is also a volunteer. Michelle Scott tells how she became a choir member.
MICHELLE SCOTT: You create a CD and you send that in, and if they like what they hear, then you take a test on theory and ear training. And it's about a three-hour test. It's quite involved, quite intense. And then, if you pass that test, then there is an in-person audition with both of the directors.
Ron Gunnell is an assistant to the choir's president.
DONALD GUNNELL: It is a rigorous commitment. And it, for example, last year I think we were at the Tabernacle or Conference Center probably about 178 days out of the year for choir recordings, concerts, rehearsals. A lot of people travel nearly a hundred miles each way to be here.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir will sometimes invite other artists to perform. Jazz singer Natalie Cole, Italian singer Andrea Bocelli and composer John Williams have all performed with the choir. The Tabernacle is also home to one of the largest organs in the world. Richard Elliott is the main organist for the choir.
RICHARD ELLIOTT: There are pipes in this organ in the Tabernacle that date back all the way to the 1860s, around 1867, including the large gold pipes that you see in the case. It has 11,623 pipes, making it the 12th largest pipe organ in the world. But what makes it truly great is this building itself. It has a wonderful acoustic, and shows the organ in its best light.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir performs on a weekly, 30-minute program called Music and the Spoken Word. The program was first broadcast in 1929. It can now be heard on more than 2,000 radio and television stations around the world. Trent Walker is the main audio engineer.
TRENT WALKER: The show is a wonderful show to do, because we try to make it as high quality as we can for a live production. A show in the Tabernacle will be in excess of probably 74 microphones on the stage at once. We multi-track record all of those shows so we can then produce the best sound quality that we can, for the listening audience. Over the years, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir has won many awards for its performances in the United States and overseas. Mack Wilberg is its music director.
MACK WILBERG: Not everyone likes everything. And so we try to do a balance of not only the great music of the master composers, but also hymns -- a staple of the repertoire of the choir. Sometimes we'll put in folk music, African-American spirituals, sometimes a little bit of inspirational show tunes, from Broadway or a movie of some kind.
For years, the choir has performed for millions of people of all religions. It is likely to do so for years to come. I'm Christopher Cruise.
Salt Lake City: Mormon Tabernacle Choir
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir is a 360-member choir. The choir is part of The Church of Jesus AChrist of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).
The Tabernacle houses an organ consisting of 11,623 pipes. The choir is usually accompanied by it. An orchestra or a cappella singing is used as well.
The choir was founded in August 1847, one month after the Mormon pioneers entered the Salt Lake Valley. Prospective singers must be LDS Church members who are eligible for a temple recommend, be between 25 and 55 years of age at the start of choir service, and live within 100 miles of Temple Square.
The Tabernacle was completed in 1867 and the choir held its first concert there on July 4, 1873.
The choir started out fairly small and rather undisciplined. In 1869, George Careless was appointed as the choir's conductor and the Tabernacle Choir began to musically improve. Under Careless, the first large choir was assembled by adding smaller choral groups to the main Salt Lake Choir. This larger choir, just over 300, sang at the church's October 1873 general conference. It was at this point that the choir began to match the size of the spacious Tabernacle. On September 1, 1910, the choir sang the song, Let the Mountains shout for Joy, as their first ever recording.
Since July 15, 1929, the choir has performed a weekly radio broadcast called Music & the Spoken Word, which is one of the longest-running continuous radio network broadcasts in the world.
Later directors brought more solid vocal training and worked to raise the standards of the choir. The choir also began improving as an ensemble and increased its repertoire from around one hundred songs to nearly a thousand. In July 1929, the choir performed its first radio broadcast of Music & the Spoken Word. It now broadcasts worldwide through approximately 1,500 radio and television stations.
Mormon Temple Square Salt Lake City
This video shows shots of the Mormon Family History Center, Museum, Tabernacle and Temple.
Mormon Assembly Hall, Salt Lake City, Utah
Day 49 7-18-16 The Assembly Hall is just like a church - you would go in there on Sunday's.
Mormon Tabernacle Choir Sings at 2017 US Presidential Inauguration
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir performed during the 58th Presidential Inauguration in the nation’s capital Friday. The choir was accompanied by “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band as they sang during the swearing-in ceremony of President Donald J. Trump and Vice President Michael R. Pence.
“We are incredibly happy to have the Mormon Tabernacle Choir back again at the inauguration. It is a part of America's history, and the music is incredibly beautiful,” said Jason Goodman of the Presidential Inauguration Committee.
Music director Mack Wilberg conducted the choir in the outdoor performance of his arrangement of “America the Beautiful” just before noon on the West Terrace of the Capitol.
“The lyrics were written by Katharine Bates in 1893, during a visit to Pike's Peak in Colorado,” said Wilberg. “It's one of our great songs because it talks about our great heritage and our continued potential as a great nation.”
Choir members were dressed in crème-colored coats with matching turtleneck sweaters and red plaid scarves as they sang outdoors under cloudy skies. In all, 215 singers of the 360-member choir, goodwill ambassadors of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, traveled from Salt Lake City to the nation’s capital for the historic event after accepting an invitation from the U.S. Presidential Inauguration Committee.
Call of the Champions - John Williams Conducting the Mormon Tabernacle Choir
John Williams conducts the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Orchestra at Temple Square, and International Children's Choir in performing the 2002 Winter Olympic theme song Call of the Champions during the Cultural Olympiad concert, February 9, 2002. Call of the Champions was composed by John Williams for the 2002 Olympic Games.
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“Citius, Altius, Fortius!” That was the soaring sound that was heard during the Salt Lake 2002 Winter Olympic Games. Those three Latin words, meaning “Faster, Higher, Stronger,” echoed throughout millions of homes as people around the world tuned in to watch those games. “Call of the Champions” was a spectacular collaboration that inspired hearts and lifted spirits of a nation still reeling from the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir performed the national anthem at the opening ceremonies, which included a tribute using the flag that was flown at Ground Zero.
In his fourth time composing music for the Olympic games, famed composer John Williams was excited to know that he would have the Mormon Tabernacle Choir to distinguish the piece from previous compositions, saying, I was like a giddy child working with them, I loved it. This resulted in a thrilling five-minute work involving chorus and orchestra. Conducted by Williams, the Utah Symphony and the Choir performed the song at the opening ceremonies. It is featured on the albums American Journey by John Williams and the Choir’s album Spirit of America.
The Olympic games in Salt Lake City were the most watched Olympics ever at the time and are now third on the all-time list. The opening ceremonies of the 2002 winter games still holds the number-one spot for total viewership. During those winter games, the Choir participated in the Cultural Olympiad with four signature concerts, one of which featured John Williams. In the classic video above, Williams conducts the Choir, Orchestra at Temple Square, and the International Children’s Choir in a breathtaking rendition of Call of the Champions.
2002 Olympic Games
Doug Wright tours the Tabernacle
We told the folks at Temple Square that Doug Wright Show has live from the Salt Lake Tabernacle on his broadcast bucket list, and they not only gave him the go-ahead to host his show there, they gave him a personal, behind-the-scenes tour - complete with the opportunity to play the organ!
Mormon Religion: Mormon Tabernacle Choir
is a video describing how to learn more about the Mormon Church.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir is a large all-volunteer choir, the official choir of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormon church).
Called America's Choir by U.S. President Ronald Reagan, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir is made up of 360 men and women, all Mormons and all living within close vicinity of the famous Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City, Utah. Choir members are not paid for their participation or performances. There are many husband-wife combinations and many families have participated in the choir for generations.
The choir was founded in August 1847, one month after the Mormon pioneers entered the Salt Lake Valley. The choir is completely self-funded, traveling and producing albums to support their organization.
Since July 15, 1929, the choir has performed a weekly radio broadcast called Music and the Spoken Word, which is the longest-running continuous network broadcast in the world. The show has been televised since the early 1960s and is now broadcast worldwide through some 1,500 radio, television, and cable stations.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir's sound is often said to be world-famous, and instantly recognizable.
2019 Pioneer Day Concert with Sissel - Music for a Summer Evening
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1) The Handcart Song (0:33)
2) Faith in Every Footstep (3:17)
3) Saints Bound for Heaven (9:21)
4) Like an Angel Passing through My Room, with Sissel (12:24)
5) Eatnemen Vuelie, with Sissel (20:22)
6) Norwegian Valdres March - Orchestra at Temple Square (23:46)
7) Eg veit i himmerik ei borg (I Know a Castle in Heaven), with Sissel (27:39)
8) O store gud (“How Great Thou Art”), with Sissel (33:20)
9) O, Peter, Go Ring Them Bells (37:32)
10) My God So High (39:53)
11) Panis angelicus, with Sissel (43:28)
12) Slow Down, with Sissel (48:06)
13) The Gospel Train (55:30)
14) The Railroad Medley: Bound for Glory (57:17)
15) Önska dig ett gott nytt år (A Happy New Year), with Sissel (1:05:00)
16) Hymn to Freedom, with Sissel (1:11:13)
17) I’m Runnin’ On (1:16:19)
18) Thou Gracious God, Whose Mercy Lends, with Sissel (1:19:56)
Internationally acclaimed Norwegian-born singer Sissel was the featured guest with The Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square during their 2019 Pioneer Day Concert. Audiences still have not forgotten Sissel’s stunning performances at the Choir and Orchestra’s 2006 Christmas concerts and still regard her as one of the favorite guests of the Choir. The concert was shown in 2007 on PBS stations to 4 million viewers around the country. The Christmas CD, Spirit of the Season, was #1 on Billboard’s Classical chart for nine weeks and was nominated for two Grammy® awards.
For more about Sissel:
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#Sissel #tabchoir #livestream #Titanic
2019 Pioneer Concert: Music for a Summer Evening
The Star-Spangled Banner at the Salt Lake City 2002 Olympic Games (Post 9/11)
The Star-Spangled Banner is the national anthem of the United States of America. The lyrics come from the Defence of Fort M'Henry, a poem written on September 14, 1814, by the then 35-year-old lawyer and amateur poet Francis Scott Key.
The American flag rescued from the World Trade Center Site on September 11, 2001 was carried into the stadium by an honor guard of American athletes and was carried in by firefighters and police officers to remember the tragedy.
The National Anthem is performed by The Utah Symphony and Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
From SALT LAKE CITY 2002 Winter Olympic Games Opening Ceremony on February 8th, 2002 at Rice-Eccles Olympic Stadium.
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LDS Salt Lake City, Utah Tabernacle Choir Loft. Sunday, November 4, 2012. Video 1 Of 9.
On Sunday, November 4, 2012, I, Tyson Clair Price got the opportunity to sing in a CES, (Church Educational System), Devotional/Fireside Broadcast, of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, in Salt Lake City, Utah, on LDS Temple Square of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, at The Salt Lake City, Utah Tabernacle, of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. I made nine, (9), videos of my experience, so after you watch this video, please watch video 2, if you haven't already. The choir was a choir of students attending LDS Institutes of Religion, of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, from within Salt Lake County, Utah, if I remember right. The directors were Hal Romrell and Craig Allen. The speaker was Bishop Gerald Causse. of The Presiding Bishopric of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, who was the first counselor of the presiding bishopric. The title of his talk was, We Are The Architects Of Our Own Happiness.
Please subscribe to me. Please add this video to any of your playlists. Please like this video. Please share this video with anyone you want. Please comment on this video.
Thank you for watching this video. Thank you. Thanks. Heavenly Father/God, Jesus Christ, and The Holy Ghost loves you and are your best 3 Friends that you will always have, so smile and be happy. Have a GREAT day/night. Bye.
This video was made by me, Tyson Price.
Tyson Price
1-801-864-6631
pricetyson97530@gmail.com
Learn about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
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Salt Lake City. Utah. USA. The Lord´s Prayer. Andrea Bocelli.
2002 Salt Lake City Olympic Opening Ceremony
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Utah Utes Fight Song - Mormon Tabernacle Choir
To be aired on ESPN this Saturday
Mormon Tabernacle Choir Returns to Europe after Decades Away – Recaptures Iconic Photo
More than 300 members of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and 65 members of the Orchestra at Temple Square wrap up a seven-city summer tour in western Europe, with 90-minute live performances that were scheduled from June 29 through July 13, 2016. The music ranged from classical choral to American folk and gospel music to well-known songs of stage and screen.
“We are thrilled that international audiences are enjoying the musicianship of the choir and orchestra in person,” said choir president Ron Jarrett following the first few concerts. “There’s nothing quite like it.”
As they began their three-week tour, the Utah-based performers, goodwill ambassadors for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, received standing ovations at sold-out venues in Berlin and Nuremberg, Germany, and Vienna, Austria. Other cities on the schedule included Zurich, Switzerland; Frankfurt, Germany; Brussels, Belgium; and Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
“It is not the love of music alone that motivates the members of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, but their faith,” said religious historian Jean-François Mayer, who attended the Zurich concert and blogged afterwards.
It’s that understanding of faith that Elder Patrick Kearon of the Seventy and presiding leader over the Church in Europe, said is vitally important. “Thousands of people have come to see the choir and hear the orchestra—and they love it. It’s helping us to make friends. It is helping to break down any lingering misunderstandings about who we are and it’s softening hearts and the members of the Church themselves have been lifted.”
The choir played to a sold-out audience at the 2,100-seat Berlin Philharmonie, the first performance in Berlin by the choir in 25 years. The crowd demanded two encores and continued clapping even after music director Mack Wilberg had left the stage and the singers and musicians began to file out.
Some choir members said one of the songs they sang, “Battle of Jericho,” took on deeper meaning after the members viewed the remains of the Berlin Wall from the Cold War. The song includes the lyrics “and the walls came tumbling down.”
Prior to the tour, the choir was cautioned not to take it for granted that the sophisticated European audiences would give the performers the enthusiastic response they are used to receiving at home in Salt Lake City, Utah. However, audiences rewarded the choir and orchestra with standing ovations following encore performances of the signature songs “Battle Hymn of the Republic” and “God Be with You,” a farewell hymn traditionally performed at the end of their concerts. Audience members were pleased when the choir sang a German version of “God Be with You” called “Gott Sei Mit Euch.”
President Dieter F. Uchtdorf, second counselor in the First Presidency of the Church, said, “The choir, wherever it goes, whether it’s in Salt Lake City on its weekly program or whether it’s traveling anywhere in the world, is really a representation of the Church and what it stands for. These members of the choir and the orchestra and all those who participate are truly not only missionaries for our message but they are ambassadors for this great cause of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.”
On Saturday, July 2, the choir performed to a full house at the Musikverein in Vienna and made a sizable donation to the charitable organization Caritas Austria. The contribution included proceeds from the concert as well as from the Humanitarian Aid Fund of the Church. The funds will support Caritas projects for local citizens as well as refugee projects.
Jarrett said the donation is one of the highlights of the European tour. “We always want to uplift people through music and give them joy, peace, and hope. To be able to use our musicianship to support the good work of Caritas is a humbling opportunity.”
This was the choir’s first international tour in 18 years.
The Mormon Tabernacle Choir first traveled to Europe on a seven-week concert tour in 1955. Since that first grand European tour, the choir has traveled there four other times, including tours in western and central Europe in 1973, northern Europe in 1982, eastern Europe in 1991, and southern Europe in 1998. Last summer the singers and musicians performed on the East Coast of the United States.
Sonja Sperling Poulter, an alto in the Choir from Frankfurt, Germany, had a special message for the people in her country. “I want the audiences to know that the 400 plus people on stage didn’t decide to come to Europe to see culture, churches, and landscapes; that the most beautiful things they see are the people they are performing for. I want audiences to know that everyone on stage believes in the good of people, that they all believe that there is a God that knows them and loves them.”
For more information on the Mormon Tabernacle Choir’s European tour, visit mormontabernaclechoir.org.