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  • Italian operatic tenor Luciano Pavarotti performs in London during the free Party in the Park concert to celebrate his 30 years in opera<br />
on 30th July 1991 in Londons Hyde Park. A crowd of 100,000 stood in the rain to watch Pavarotti perform 20 arias by Verdi, Puccini, Bizet and Wagner. VIPs the Princess of Wales, Prime Minister John Major and Michael Caine were soaked in heavy rain along with everyone else sitting on the grass cowering beneath tarpaulins. Pavarotti helped bring an otherwise high-brow artform to the ordinary Man after the BBC used his rendition of Nessun Dorma to theme their World Cup TV coverage.
    opera_pavarotti-30-07-1991.jpg
  • The Italian operatic tenor Luciano Pavarotti performs in London during the free Party in the Park concert to celebrate his 30 years in opera. A crowd of 100,000 stood in the London rain to watch Pavarotti perform 20 arias by Verdi, Puccini, Bizet and Wagner. VIPs the Princess of Wales, Prime Minister John Major and Michael Caine got soaked in heavy rain along with everyone else sitting on the grass cowering beneath tarpaulins. We see the rotund Operatic maestro in full flow, belting out an aria while dressed in formal tails and wastecoat and holding his customary scarf that he uses to dab the sweat from his brow. Pavarotti helped bring an otherwise high-brow artform to the ordinary Man after the BBC used his rendition of Nessun Dorma to theme their World Cup TV coverage. This lead the way to Opera reaching the Common Man in Britain.
    RB_041-30-07-1991.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7165.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7145.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7125.jpg
  • ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven, a sound installation on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Originally commissioned for the Folkestone Triennial Art festival, A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Folkestone-Art-Out-Of-Tune-7295.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7211.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7160.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-7122.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-5679.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-5669.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-5674.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-5642.jpg
  • Rain-soaked opera fans sit on wet grass before the perfoamance by Italian operatic tenor Luciano Pavarotti during the free Party in the Park concert to celebrate his 30 years in opera, on 30th July 1991 in Londons Hyde Park, on 30th July 1991, in London, England. A crowd of 100,000 stood in the rain to watch Pavarotti perform 20 arias by Verdi, Puccini, Bizet and Wagner. VIPs the Princess of Wales, Prime Minister John Major and Michael Caine were soaked in heavy rain along with everyone else sitting on the grass cowering beneath tarpaulins. Pavarotti helped bring an otherwise high-brow artform to the ordinary Man after the BBC used his rendition of Nessun Dorma to theme their World Cup TV coverage.
    opera_crowd-30-07-1991.jpg
  • Workmen carry out the reinstallation of ‘Out of Tune’ by AK Dolven with a cherry picker and a crane on the 21st of May 2020 on the seafront in Folkestone, United Kingdom. This sound installation was originally part of the Folkestone Triennial Art festival of 2011.  A K Dolven’s installation ‘Out of Tune’ features a sixteenth century tenor bell from Scraptoft Church in Leicestershire, which had been removed for not being in tune with the others. It is suspended from a steel cable strung between two 20m high steel beams, placed 30m apart. The bell was cast by Hugh Watts in the seventeenth century in Leicester. The Watts family were the leading bell founders in that city in the early 17th century. In all, they were responsible for almost two hundred castings for churches in the county. Hugh Watts prospered and was the Mayor of Leicester when King Charles 1st visited the city in 1634.
    UK-Art-Folkestone-5685.jpg
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