Ave Maria
Composer: Randall Giles (1950-2010), © 1994
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Randall |
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Giles |
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1950 |
2010 |
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1994 |
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Ave Maria, Gracia Dei plena |
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Randall |
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Giles |
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1950 |
2010 |
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Sancta Maria, ora
pro nobis |
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Recording: not available |
Lyrics: |
A ve Ma ri _ a, gra ci a De _ i ple na.
Hail bless ed flow er of
vir gin _ i ty,
That bare _ this time a _
child _ so free; _
That was and is _ and ev
_ _ er shall be,
A ve _ Ma ri _ a, gra _ _ ci _ a _ ple na.
A ve _ Ma ri _ a, gra _ _ ci _ a _ ple na. |
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Score: can be purchased
on
THIS PAGE - publ. Paracletus Press |
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Posted on YouTube: Not available at
this time. |
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You could be
featured here!
If you (or your choir) perform this Ave Maria, make a video recording.
Post your video on YouTube, email me the page URL and I'll embed the video
in this page. |
You can also email me an MP3 for audio only. |
Internet
references, biography information. |
source page |
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Randall Giles was born in
Oregon City Oregon in 1950. His first studies in composition were with
Mark DeVoto at Reed College, after which he took his undergraduate
degree at the University of York while studying with Sir Peter Maxwell
Davies in London. He then taught in the United Kingdom for two years,
after which he returned to the United States to further his studies
and to teach. Enjoying the enrichment brought by travel, he went to
Liberia in West Africa with the United States Peace Corps to help
develop a music curriculum based on Liberian indigenous music for the
Ministry of Education there. This was followed by a year with the
Alaska State Council on the Arts, enthusing about music and recording
the music of four small rural villages on an Artists in the Schools
residency. After this experience, he returned to the United Kingdom to
study with Sir Harrison Birtwistle and headed the music Department at
Queen's College, London. He subsequently took his Master's Degree at
Northwestern University studying with Alan Stout, after which he
taught on the music faculties of Lewis and Clark, Marylhurst and
Linfield colleges in Oregon. In 1991, he traveled to Madras (now
Chennai), South India, where he was a visiting Scholar at Saint
George's School, while beginning the writing of his Saint John
Passion. That work was presented for his dissertation at the
University of California, San Diego, from whence Giles received a
Doctor of Philosophy in Music degree in 1992. In 1993-1994, he
returned to south Asia as a volunteer as a small school in Nepal, and
to continue his study of liturgy and inculturation in the churches of
South Asia. In 1999, he was invited to serve the Church of South
India?s Madras Diocese, to do parish-based work in music, and to work
towards the founding of a centre for Indian Christianity and the Arts.
He is currently living in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, as Director of the
Department of Music and Liturgy for the Church of South India?s Madras
Diocese, teaching privately, doing voice-overs for the Indian film
industry, and is now the Director of the Centre. He enjoys singing,
playing the violin and piano and is a very amateur visual artist.
For the Episcopal Church's department of Anglican and Global
Relations, he has been involved in a project to record music from
various provinces of the Anglican Communion. Titled ?Throughout All
the World? the on-going series is exploring little known music from
places such as south India where Giles is living, but also from the
Church of Melanesia (the Solomon Islands) and from wherever
interesting but little known "Anglican" music can be found.
As a composer, Giles has worked in many styles and idioms including
chamber and orchestral music, vocal and choral music, and music for
the theatre and television. He has received commissions from a wide
variety of organizations and individuals both in Europe, North America
and Asia (see complete works at the Musical Works page on this site).
On 27 August 2010 in a hospital in Pondicherry, India Randall died
of a heart attack after a brief illness. This was a tremendous shock
to all of those who knew and loved him. He had just started a new
position as the dean of Swarnabhoomi Academy of Music where he was
well liked by the students and faculty alike. His sudden and
unexpected passing is a cause of great sadness to his friends, and
will be a great loss to the world of music. An obituary appeared in
the 9 September 2010 edition of The Hindu and can be read at this
address.
http://www.thehindu.com/arts/music/article623015.ece |
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Page last modified:
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