Blest Pair of Sirens is a short work for choir and orchestra by the English composer Hubert Parry, setting John Milton's ode At a solemn Musick.
The Gambier-Parry’s of Highnam Court, Gloucestershire were an artistic and military family (see Thomas Gambier Parry and the latter's son, eminent composer Sir Hubert Parry).
Hubert Humphrey | Hubert Parry | Hubert Robert | Hubert von Herkomer | Hubert Laws | Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | Hubert Gough | Thomas Gambier Parry | Hubert Burda Media | James Hubert Blake High School | Hubert Parker, Baron Parker of Waddington | Hubert Sumlin | Hubert Soudant | Hubert-François Gravelot | Hubert Austin | Yves-André Hubert | Sir Love Jones-Parry, 1st Baronet | Saint-Hubert | Rick Parry | Milman Parry | Michael Gambier-Parry | James Parry | Hubert Zemke | Hubert Wilkins | Hubert Walter | Hubert Rance | Hubert Opperman | Hubert Lyautey | Hubert Ingraham | Hubert Howe Bancroft |
Among the composers championed by proponents of the theory were Hubert Parry, Charles Villiers Stanford and Alexander Mackenzie.
He has also created documentaries about Ralph Vaughan Williams (The Passions of Vaughan Williams, 2008), Edward Elgar (The Man Behind the Mask, 2010) and Hubert Parry (The Prince and the Composer, 2011), the latter a collaboration with Charles, Prince of Wales, whom he had earlier profiled in Charles at 60: The Passionate Prince.
On 20 December 1887, he participated in the first English performance of Palestrina's Stabat Mater, at the Princes' Hall, under Sir Hubert Parry.