18th
June
2009
ultimate in design elegance.Fits 3 inch post.Huge Selection and Inventory.Authorize Dealer By Progressive Lighting .Home Improvement Mall Offers the broadest selection of Home furniture
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18th
June
2009
This wild Laurel and Hardy film casts the pair as street cleaners who stop a bank robbery. As their reward, they are both given full-ride scholarships to Oxford (which seems a bit odd, since it was the middle of the Depression). When they arrive at the British institution of higher learning, however, they become the objects of extensive pranks by the other students, who are upperclassmen in more ways than one and look down their noses at the working-class buffoons. Except for one thing: Stan, as it turns out, was one of Oxford’s most distinguished and accomplished scholars before a blow on the head turned him into the easygoing dimwit we know and love. Another knock on the noggin turns him back into the veddy British lord, who promptly sets the other students straight. Some very funny business with the boys and a stuffy dean, whose quarters they invade. –Marshall Fine
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18th
June
2009
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18th
June
2009
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18th
June
2009
The “Essential” Purcell? Well, you could get a bunch of critics to argue about that for a few days, but in the meantime, here is a sampler of highlights from the King’s Consort’s three admirable Purcell series: the Complete Odes and Welcome Songs, Complete Anthems and Services, and Complete Secular Solo Songs. There are, of course, some of Purcell’s most-performed pieces (which probably are “essential”): Dido’s Lament from Dido and Aeneas, “Sound the trumpet” from Come, ye sons of Art, Rejoice in the Lord alway (the “Bell Anthem,” named for the string figure at the opening that sounds like pealing bells), the gently patriotic “Fairest isle, all isles excelling” (sung by a miscast James Bowman), and a selection from the funeral music for Queen Mary. There are also some delightful surprises–particularly among the little-known secular songs and church music. The plaintive “O fair Cedaria” gets a lovely performance by Barbara Bonney (a singer not usually associated with Purcell); tenor Rogers Covey-Crump (possibly the ideal high tenor for Purcell) sings the enchanting “If music be the food of love”; the church anthems “Let mine eyes run down with tears” and “Remember not, O Lord, our offences” have some startling harmonies as daring as any Monteverdi ever wrote. If you’re unfamiliar with Purcell, this reasonably priced disc is a good place to start exploring without a big initial investment. –Matthew Westphal
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18th
June
2009
A-Z of Classical Music is a remarkable 562-page, illustrated bok, detailing the lives of all the great composers as well as many less known, but equally fascinating, musical masters. Like the Naxos range of recording itself, A-Z of Classical Music is a rich source of inspiration for anyone either just embarking on a lifetime of musical enjoyment or for whom classical music has long been a way of life. Included within is an extensive glossary of musical terms plus a unique guide to classical music used in acclaimed films. Two-and-a-half hours of the finest music from across the centuries are contained in the accompanying CDs.
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18th
June
2009
Beyond this recording’s new age packaging and title is a splendid sampling of some of the world’s finest choral music, sung by one of the world’s outstanding choirs. This “anthology of sacred choral music” spans 400 years and includes such masterpieces as Allegri’s Miserere, Bach’s “Jesu, joy of man’s desiring,” and Barber’s exquisite Agnus Dei, which is the composer’s choral setting of his famous Adagio for Strings. Along the way we also hear Mozart’s sublime “Ave verum corpus,” Elgar’s “Lux aeterna,” and the Kyrie from Palestrina’s Missa Papae Marcelli. There has been a choir at England’s New College, Oxford, since the year 1379, and this impressive line of experience shows in the intelligent, unfaltering, and finely polished performances by today’s ensemble of 16 boys and 12 adults. –David Vernier
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17th
June
2009
Kohler K-2415-F39 Clermont 24″ vanity, Oxford Kohler K-2415-F39 Clermont 24″ vanity, Oxford Features:; 24″L x 21-1/2″W x 33-1/2″H; Ailanthus solids and quarter sawn ash veeners; Catalyzed polyurethane finish; Adjustable door hinges; Express; installation system provides an expandable vanity solution that is easy to transport and install
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16th
June
2009
Holds most 12-inch by 12-inch sheet protectors including Pioneer 12-inch by 12-inch memory book refill pages, 4-inch by 6-inch pocket refill pages or print file cd storage pages. Archival, acid free, photo safe.
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