excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 168 (67 words)

excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 168 (67 words)

part of

Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

168

type

text excerpt

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I took an early opportunity of introducing him at Mr. Copley’s concert; and he presently began in Untwisting all the chains that tie / The hidden soul of harmony.’ For never before had we heard the concertos of Corelli, Geminiani, and Avison, or the overtures of Handel, performed more chastely, or more according to the original intention of the composers, than by Mr. Herschel. 

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excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 168 (67 words)

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