On the devere society website for years. "1589 - The Arte of English Poesie, possibly by George Puttenham but published anonymously, rolls through the presses. In this influential work of literary criticism Edward de Vere is singled out for special praise: ‘And in her Majesties time that now is are sprong up an other crew of Courtly makers Noble men and Gentlemen of her Majesties owne servantes, who have written excellently well as it would appeare if their doings could be found out and made publicke with the rest, of which number is first that noble Gentleman Edward Earle of Oxford.’ The devere society is beneath contempt.
@jimihendrix991Ай бұрын
''...the vulgar sort...'' = The actual population...
@dmswan3172Ай бұрын
Sublime, timeless music!🌹🌹🌹
@cryptohalloffame2 ай бұрын
Fantastic, Shakespeare's Lost Kingdom is a phenomenal work, astounding really.
@cryptohalloffame2 ай бұрын
Shakespeare's lost kingdom is beyond brilliant. An astounding book, a real treasure.
@billlloyd40292 ай бұрын
de Vere was a phony
@mstipich12 ай бұрын
Innocentio Alberti: Pavin Of Albarti 0:00 Innocentio Alberti: Gallyard 2:39 Anonyme: In Nomine A 5 4:39 Nicholas Strogers: In Nomine III A 5 6:59 Anonyme: Desperada 9:00 Anonyme: Gallyard 10:52 Anonyme. Allemande 13:34 Clement Woodcock: Browning My Dear 15:10 Robert White: In Nomine V A 5 17:29 Anonyme: Ronda 20:47 Anonyme: La Represa Anonyme: (Gallyard) 22:58 Clement Woodcock: In Nomine II A 5 25:13 Clement Woodcock: In Nomine III A 5 27:33 Anonyme: Allemana D'Amor 30:25 Anonyme: (Dance) 32:31 John Taverner: Quemadmodum A 6 33:48 William Daman: Sei Soprani 38:50 Anonyme: Pavana 42:24 Anonyme: Brandeberges 44:43 Anonyme: La Represa 46:07 Nicholas Strogers: In Nomine IV A 6 47:19 William Mundy: O Mater Mundi A 5 50:08 Anonyme: Pavana 53:20 Anonyme: Gallyard 55:21 Anonyme: (Dance) 56:3157:38 Robert Parsons: In Nomine IV A 7 57:38 Robert Parsons: The Song Called Trumpets A 6 1:00:32 Robert Parsons: In Nomine V A 7 10:02:31
@maryoleary50442 ай бұрын
Alexander Waugh - Dear Sir, I made a comment on one of these vids and you replied back - thanks for that! Now, I can't find which video it was for 😤😄 Anyhow, when I need to feed my brain, I go to your excellent videos! You, my Rats and other Animals...all creatures enjoy using their brains and being free (hopefully 😔😔😔)
@garypowell86384 ай бұрын
This matters for far more serious reasons than satisfying the idle curiosity of a few wannabe intellectuals. It shows that great lies and deceptions can and have been carried out by the very top of society and been perpetuated for many hundreds of years. WE WERE LIED TO and we still are being lied to. This was a systematically organised conspiracy to deceive. This involved not only top members of the English aristocracy but Elizabeth and James 1st. The consequences and motivations may have been reasonably benign but what this reveals should make us wonder how many other matters that have formed the foundations of our historical record are also fraudulent? We already know of some of them, but how many more exist that we have have not yet discovered? The truth is that we live in a world of lies and deceptions some of which are far older then this one. In my opinion virtually everything that we believe is the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth is not. This applies to virtually all subject matters, to a great or greater degree. Knowledge is power. This is why our Owners retain so much of the latter and we remain with so little of the former. It is perhaps ironic that the greatest proponent of the Enlightenment namely Sir Francis Bacon was one of the Worlds greatest liars and deceivers as well as one of the smartest and most influential persons ever to have lived. Bacon and his co-conspirators may have had the best intentions in mind when embarking on this great project to deceive the masses, but the motivation is relatively unimportant with regards to its clear implications. This also amply demonstrates that it is far easier to fool someone than convince them that they have been fooled.
@KieranRobinson-zz6ug4 ай бұрын
All this time used for nothing..im sure William who ever he was would not be happy with all of you with your heads in books and not living. Im reminded of another illuminated mind, that of William blake and his painting of Sir Issac Newton and how he has his head stuck in paper to busy counting up the numbers and letters that are hidden and misses the true beauty of creation and its illuminator the God above your tiny god
@nitromethane0014 ай бұрын
I listen to the music of Mr. Savall and the like everyday. Its as much a part of my life as is the air Im breathing right now.
@kaposipal5 ай бұрын
why is it elisabethian... why not philippian...???!!!
Soy Colombiano y misteriosamente esta musica transporta mi espiritu a otra época, de maravilla.
@sibilapetrovic83556 ай бұрын
❤
@EtienneRoch6 ай бұрын
Innocentio Alberti: Pavin Of Albarti 0:00 Innocentio Alberti: Gallyard 2:39 Anonyme: In Nomine A 5 4:39 Nicholas Strogers: In Nomine III A 5 6:59 Anonyme: Desperada 9:00 Anonyme: Gallyard 10:52 Anonyme. Allemande 13:34 Clement Woodcock: Browning My Dear 15:10 Robert White: In Nomine V A 5 17:29 Anonyme: Ronda 20:47 Anonyme: La Represa Anonyme: (Gallyard) 22:58 Clement Woodcock: In Nomine II A 5 25:13 Clement Woodcock: In Nomine III A 5 27:33 Anonyme: Allemana D'Amor 30:25 Anonyme: (Dance) 32:31 John Taverner: Quemadmodum A 6 33:48 William Daman: Sei Soprani 38:50 Anonyme: Pavana 42:24 Anonyme: Brandeberges 44:43 Anonyme: La Represa 46:07 Nicholas Strogers: In Nomine IV A 6 47:19 William Mundy: O Mater Mundi A 5 50:08 Anonyme: Pavana 53:20 Anonyme: Gallyard 55:21 Anonyme: (Dance) 56:3157:38 Robert Parsons: In Nomine IV A 7 57:38 Robert Parsons: The Song Called Trumpets A 6 1:00:32 Robert Parsons: In Nomine V A 7 10:02:31
@mstipich12 ай бұрын
Thanks. This should be done by ones that post vidos
@DeslealspriteDelbosque7 ай бұрын
Thanks for this beautiful Master piece
@mauriziosorelli95667 ай бұрын
Musica modalis, non tonalis
@englishrose477 ай бұрын
Today’s banal mush that passes for music does not hold a candle to this.
@peckerwood60788 ай бұрын
Performed in an MFA production of his "Volunteers" which looked at the incarceration of insurgents during the troubles. I was the Gaoler. Supervising the Archeological dig. Mr.Wilcox, a presbyterian of the Anglo Norman, Scotch Irish ascendancy. It was an exploration of the inner and outer aspects of an intensely confounding psychological drama. Not to be missed.
@citipol8 ай бұрын
.
@scotty8 ай бұрын
excellent
@jonathonjubb66268 ай бұрын
I have only just realised that plays and masques were the internet' of thise days.. A much bigger deal than I hitherto thought...
@papagen008 ай бұрын
This is true chicken soup for the soul.
@anneborrel23788 ай бұрын
❤💋 Thanks 💋❤️
@JohnSayer-ql5jb9 ай бұрын
a million endorsements of duncan's words below
@poesie627910 ай бұрын
wonderful. Can I share it?
@thomridgeway143810 ай бұрын
Edward Devere - The great elephant in the room that Stratfordians seemingly never see. At the highest levels they must know surely! That cannot be fools. At that level are they gatekeepers? Are they paid to keep this from the world? If so, by whom? Who is so powerful that they would want this kept secret?
@6deste10 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating presentation Kevin. Many thanks. Love the use of old pictures and maps etc.
@6deste10 ай бұрын
That was amazing, thank you all
@6deste10 ай бұрын
Absolutely beautiful Alexander
@voraciousreader334110 ай бұрын
I’m a musician who’s studied, played, and sung all kinds and periods of Western “classical” music, and I listen to it all the time. I really love the composers of this period from all over Europe, but when I hear music from the English Renaissance it always makes me feel I’ve come home. My ancestors came to America beginning in 1620 and ending in 1840-I’m still 100% English descent-so it’s weird that I identify with the music so strongly, but I do. Especially the Church music.
@anneborrel237810 ай бұрын
Quite understanding this so comforting "Welcome Home !" You feel with those musics as for me with this one and with many other even scottish or french folkloric musics so deeply can move you 😢❤ Thank you Anne
@iahelcathartesaura38879 ай бұрын
I relate and we have a number of these type of synchronicities or what have you in my family about various things. Very unbelievable synchronicities in fact. And I have similar things myself as you've described! It seems so mysterious, yet so familiar. A mysterious phenomenon how we are drawn to things, but yet it makes complete sense in some way we as yet don't fully understand.
@iahelcathartesaura38879 ай бұрын
@@anneborrel2378 Yes! Indeed 😌
@niclas99906 ай бұрын
Yeah, weird. It's definitely not that you're simply aware of your own ancestry and willfully identifying with periods that you find remarkable through that specific lens, no way.
@ferleyholguin88865 ай бұрын
Me pasa igual, me pregunto si la reencarnación en verdad existe por qué musicalmente al escuchar éstas obras, siento haber vivido en la Inglaterra Medieval.
@joseoliveira885810 ай бұрын
Alberto Soza ceased his channel long ago, I think, isn't it? Or does he still have it under a different name? His channel was really great!
@alvarobudria11 ай бұрын
El gran mestre Savall, igualadí com servidor, ha dut a terme una magnífica i prolífica obra de conservació, restauració i embelliment del patrimoni històric musical d'arreu d'Europa. El mestre ha esdevingut EL pont que connecta la posmodernitat atrafagada amb l'eclosió renaixentista.
@lohengrin117211 ай бұрын
Bonjour, c'est une pure merveille: il y a un équilibre subtil entre l'expression des instruments et leur conduite: ni trop, ni trop peu. Certains trouvent cela lassant, pas moi.
@sdorr11 ай бұрын
Thanks for uploading this sublimely beautiful music! England was a center of western art-music & kultur until recent decades...The Elizabethan accomplishments will outlast momentary dysfunction & general wackiness in the UK!
@susanskelly731210 ай бұрын
and hopefully the world how wonderful it would be, along with other culture's versions of their masterpieces then nothing could generate the hatred of war
@excelsior99910 ай бұрын
@@susanskelly7312 Are you assuming that every culture produces masterpieces? I'm not aware of any masterpieces coming out of a tribe of cannibal head-hunters.
@stevegebhart83888 ай бұрын
We must remember that beauty is always in the eye of the beholder.
@excelsior9998 ай бұрын
@@stevegebhart8388 The sentiment behind that old saw is noble but the physical world that relativistic aphorism just doesn't fly. Back in the days when there used to be Beauty Contests you never saw a fat, pimpley,, heavily tattooed contestant in a bathing suit or in an Evening Dress - even if she happened to be a beautiful woman "on the inside.". Plato was right in saying that in fact, Some Thngs are Better than Other Things.
@niclas99906 ай бұрын
@@excelsior999 Oddly enough, beauty standards vary widely by age and place. But if we're simply taking Europe, because you're clearly a raging racist, then consider the Venus of Willendorf, the scale-tickling waifs of Elizabethan England, then your post-war contest beauties. Pray tell why they just couldn't make their minds up if it's so objectively clear wherein beauty lies? More, do tell how these masterpieces of yours were made by people who only 15,000 years ago were cannibalizing each other in Cheddar Gorge? My dear sir, please take your masterpieces, insert, and spin yourself so hard you lose all will to spew nonsense on the internet.
@heinznachbaur989511 ай бұрын
Diese Musik ist wunderschön! BRAVO
@dagostinoification11 ай бұрын
Magnifique ! limpide, reposant...
@sophiajohnson8608 Жыл бұрын
This is such beautiful music!
@tiagocorsograziottin3231 Жыл бұрын
👏🏿🤞🏿👍🏿👏🏿
@MegaCirse Жыл бұрын
Magnifique !! La musique tient ici le milieu entre la nature matérielle et la nature intellectuelle : elle peut dépouiller l'amour de son écorce terrestre, ou donner un corps à l'ange selon les dispositions de celui qui écoute, ses accords sont des pensées, des coups de fouet ou des caresses
@Ganpignanus Жыл бұрын
so much better than the music of today.
@voraciousreader334110 ай бұрын
Thank God I love all of it, every period, every country!
@joho98155 ай бұрын
Absolutely!
@rosanacianciosi1226 Жыл бұрын
Escuchar esta musica te relaja el espiritu,hermosa pieza musical,gracias por compartirla,saludos
@davidkamran9092 Жыл бұрын
GREAT I LOVE IT - ACTUALLE RESEARCH --- MY RESEARCH IS BASED ON ALPHAMALES WHO CAUSE THESE DOPPLERS ..EG WHO IS THE ALPHA MALE PROWLING VIKING TER OR EUROPA OR PERSIA OR CHINE WHO ORIGINATED & INSPIRED THESE PERFECT DOPPLERS ATTRIBUTED TO SHAKESPEARE - DAVID KAMRAN OF 2134KSCIENCES:REPLICANTS:RESEARCHUNIT
@magyar414 Жыл бұрын
Megragad az előadás és végig nem enged el,csodálatos!!!
@EndoftheTownProductions Жыл бұрын
John Heminges, Henry Condell, and Richard Burbage, three actors of The Lord Chamberlain's Men, a famous acting company that included William Shakespeare, were given money by William Shakespeare of Stratford in his Last Will and Testament in 1616. Two of these actors, John Heminges and Henry Condell, were responsible for having 36 of Shakespeare's plays published in the First Folio in 1623. Ben Jonson's eulogy in the First Folio clearly praises Shakespeare as a great writer and refers to him as the “Sweet Swan of Avon.” This obviously designates Shakespeare as from Stratford upon Avon. Furthermore, Jonson states that "thy writings to be such, /As neither Man, nor Muse, can praise too much." Heminges and Condell also praise Shakespeare as a writer, stating that "he thought, he uttered with that easinesse, that wee have scarse received from him a blot in his papers. But it is not our province, who onely gather his works, and give them you, to praise him." These are "his works" and "his papers" that they are publishing. He is clearly presented as the writer of these works in the First Folio. The Last Will and Testament of William Shakespeare of Stratford clearly connects him with the 1623 First Folio through Heminges and Condell and it is clear that Shakespeare is presented as the author of the plays.