Fully muffled bells, Operation London Bridge, and ringing for the death of a monarch

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Комментарии • 14

  • @c-historia
    @c-historia Год назад +6

    thanks for posting this video; the funeral sound at the death of the sovereign is one of the most solemn things I have ever heard played!

  • @MargoMarshall
    @MargoMarshall Год назад +3

    Thanks Scott, this is super informative and helpful. Much appreciated. ❤

  • @ddub0937
    @ddub0937 Год назад +3

    Hi Scott,Dan here a Bell Ringer from the Waikato Cathedral Church Of St Peter.
    Great video by the way.
    We rang open ringing on Saturday 10/09/22 at 12.00pm for King Charles the III on all eight bells.Then we rang fully muffled bells on the Sunday morning for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the II.
    This is something I’ll treasure forever as I’ll probably never get the chance to do again.

    • @spil030
      @spil030  Год назад

      Thanks Dan! Yeah, this has been such a wonderful experience. We've been recording as much as we can so that we have it for posterity since it will be a long time before we encounter this again.

  • @mrunixman1579
    @mrunixman1579 Год назад +1

    missed opportunity to ring the bells like this, always wanted to try it.

  • @dedododo48
    @dedododo48 Год назад

    Well done today, Thank you to you and your team.

  • @MelanniedelaCruz
    @MelanniedelaCruz 17 дней назад

    The first was 5 bells

  • @AllieThePrettyGator
    @AllieThePrettyGator Год назад +1

    How come the Tenor never gets the Full Muffled during the monarchs passing

    • @spil030
      @spil030  Год назад +1

      Tradition I guess! It is something that has been passed down through time. I suppose it is to show the contrast between how they usually sound and the muffled sound.

    • @AllieThePrettyGator
      @AllieThePrettyGator Год назад +1

      @@spil030 here in america we use Bourdon Bells to toll at Funerals

    • @spil030
      @spil030  Год назад

      @@AllieThePrettyGator Yeah, we toll our tenor which has the same effect. Same principle really, just different names!

    • @AllieThePrettyGator
      @AllieThePrettyGator 2 месяца назад

      @@spil030 In change ringing the biggest bell is called the "tenor" however if a larger, heavier bell is also present it would be called a "bourdon". only a handful of cathedrals have them

  • @edmilner
    @edmilner Год назад

    Is that good practice to work amongst the bells in an up position?

    • @spil030
      @spil030  Год назад +1

      I had a comment here somewhere which I now can't find which covered that we have bell locks on our bells when they're in the upright position. That's the topic of a future video if I can get our steeplekeeper, the engineer who invented the system, to sit down for more than 5 minutes!