Bells of Cambridge
For over 1,200 years church bells have called the faithful to worship, helping people celebrate triumph and commemorate tragedy. But the fact that they are one of the largest and loudest musical instruments in the world is often overlooked. This is something musical innovator Charles Hazlewood wants to change - he wants to see if church bells can be used to make original music in their own right. Choosing Cambridge for his musical experiment, Charles immerses himself in the world of bells and bell ringing. He tries his hand at ringing church bells, handbells and even a carillon - an instrument which resembles an organ made out of bells. He discovers why church bell ringing sounds the way it does and tries out some radical techniques - pushing the boundaries, he re-rigs a whole church tower so it can play a tune. At the culmination of his investigations Charles devises and performs an extraordinary piece of music which involves three separate church towers and 30 handbell ringers gathered from across the eastern counties.

The Craft of Bellringing

Bell Ringing: It's Harder Than It Looks

The most EXHAUSTING Organ Piece Ever Written

Domtoren Clock Tower Plays the Marble Machine Song

How It Works... Mechanical GAVIOLI FAIRGROUND ORGAN from 1905 ex Day's Gallopers with Nick Williams

The Mathematics of Bell Ringing

What RAF Pilots Said When They First Flew The American P-51 Mustang

The Community of Jesus, Cape Cod - Bell Tower at the Church of the Transfiguration

I helped break a 142-year-old bell, and that's okay.

Duruflé - Requiem: Live from Trinity College Chapel | The Choir of Trinity College Cambridge

Change Ringing in America - A Tour of American Bell Towers

Change Ringing: The Beautiful Intersection Between Math and Music, featuring Emily Russell

New Bells for St James Garlickhythe

Carillon (100 tons of bells)

Call Changes

The Cathedral Bells

Ring For The Future © Alan Taylor

Building a Mechanical Clock - 6 Years of Clockmaking in Just 50 Minutes!

Let's try ringing historic English church bells (for the first time)

