Devon Call Change Ringing at Purton, Wiltshire

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2018
  • Filmed Saturday 13th October 2018, when Scott Adams (Bellr1nger) and his Devon call-change band visited Swindon Branch for a day of ringing. The team were a pleasure to host, and I was very pleased to be able to join in with some of their ringing as well.
    Purton was our first tower. While undoubtedly glorious in their own way, they are a very strange ring of bells, and a real handful too. The heavy six were augmented by Taylor’s in 1989, and the two new trebles blend in well; they work well as an eight. However, a mixed bag of founders, strange weight gradients, long draught and big-going back bells make for a real heave! You will also spot that the sixth bell is just a tiny bit oddstruck! Cast by Joseph Carter of Reading in 1598, it is thought to be the largest bell he cast. The tenor, cast by Abel Rudhall, is a comparatively light bell for its note, and the jump in weight from the 4th (8-0-21) to the 5th (14-2-0) is most unusual; the back bells are all tenors in their own right, with little jump in weight between them! A rewarding ring, but certainly no pushover!
    The church itself is a super building, and one of only three churches in England to have both a western tower and a central spire (Wanborough and Ormskirk being the others). The spire dates from the 14th century, and the tower from the 15th.
    Tenor 20-0-14 in C#
    dove.cccbr.org.uk/detail.php?...
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Комментарии • 26

  • @505LandOfEntrapment
    @505LandOfEntrapment 2 года назад +3

    OMG! Listening from Virginia, USA!

  • @falcons1988
    @falcons1988 4 года назад +7

    I could listen to queens at 3:00 all day. Beautiful striking on a beautifully sounding change.

  • @chriswilson8191
    @chriswilson8191 2 года назад +4

    Lord God, Billy Bob. I've heard change ringing before, but these folks seem to be challenging dimensional boundaries with their harmonics. I wouldn't be at all surprised if unexpected metaphysical manifestations followed them home. I wish there were some opportunities for learning change-ringing where I live, only hain't no bells.

  • @al251049
    @al251049 5 месяцев назад

    Lifts my soul, thank you so much.❤

  • @alastairashford7919
    @alastairashford7919 4 года назад +5

    Just wonderful!

  • @Bellr1nger
    @Bellr1nger 5 лет назад +3

    Great video Simon. Thanks again for all your hospitality. It was a day to remember.

  • @infinitetrinity2436
    @infinitetrinity2436 3 года назад +2

    How in the world did you do this??? It was Beautiful!!! Thank you so much!!! My mind is blown away!!!🤔😳😘💜

  • @ianjamesian6453
    @ianjamesian6453 4 года назад +6

    Wish the video could be shown in full and not keep cutting out with photos would be nice to of seen a video hearing all the changes being rung

  • @paulmorley8984
    @paulmorley8984 2 года назад +2

    Beautiful!

  • @KosTomas
    @KosTomas 2 года назад +1

    Amazing ❤️

  • @EngPheniks
    @EngPheniks 2 года назад +1

    3:23 - "Ah! Christmas socks" 🕺🏻🧦🧸

  • @irenec4876
    @irenec4876 4 года назад +3

    At Pulborough the 7 (G#) is 7cwt and the Tenor (8 F#) is 14cwt. Massive jump there

    • @simonbellringer
      @simonbellringer  4 года назад

      Big weight jumps on tenors aren't unusual - take Redcliffe, say (25cwt to 50cwt!), or Liverpool (55 to 82 - there are numerous other towers which have an oversized tenor making the jump bigger than it needs to be. It is very unusual to have such a weight gap in the middle of the circle, and especially when the tenors are all quite closely aligned in weight.

  • @realbranchipaolo
    @realbranchipaolo 5 лет назад +1

    Really good peal

  • @jamesperry4841
    @jamesperry4841 2 года назад +2

    Isn't it really risky to have your wrist through the tail? Unlikely I know, but what happens if you have a bad ring and break the stay. I know someone who was ringing somewhere new and the stay broke on him.

  • @Ben-uj6qk
    @Ben-uj6qk 5 лет назад +3

    Nice raise up. Just fire it at the start!

  • @dloidean5940
    @dloidean5940 2 года назад

    Remembering Connie Black Engle, our Angell

  • @petergraves2085
    @petergraves2085 8 месяцев назад

    The first minute sounded cacophonous. It sounded as the bells were hanging down at rest and had to be first brought up. Otherwise = a glorious sound. Or - more appropriately = sounds. I used to do the same ringing at All Saints, Parramatta (Sydney, Australia).

  • @nord1486
    @nord1486 2 года назад +1

    Who’s the bit of totty on the 2 not keeping her hands together at backstroke?

  • @NoTengoIdeaGuey
    @NoTengoIdeaGuey 2 года назад

    Can't imagine what happens if you start to mess up in the middle, just shrug and say, I guess I'll try harder tomorrow.

  • @BigBobTheNewBellRinger
    @BigBobTheNewBellRinger 10 месяцев назад

    Can anyone explain to a new bell ringer why there are so many things that these guys do which is against the "best practice" technique? Hands apart, slipping the hand down the rope at back stroke, hand through the loop etc. All these things "wrong" yet they are considered some of the best in the business!

    • @Sam76889
      @Sam76889 Месяц назад

      Good question!

  • @josephhill12790
    @josephhill12790 4 года назад

    What is odd about these?

    • @simonbellringer
      @simonbellringer  4 года назад +1

      They are a strange ring of bells - I really love them and they sound great! But the weights are weird (they are basically 4 trebles and 4 tenors - look on Dove!), they are a real mix of dates and founders, the 5th is hard work and the 6th is oddstruck. It's not just one thing but a number of little characteristics. Hard work, but worth it for the reward!