Bach Parley with Reginald Mobley, countertenor, in-person or live streamed
The Bach Parley is back, with special guest artist Reginald Mobley, countertenor. Mobley is no stranger to Tallahassee. With his astonishingly beautiful voice he sang at the FSU College of Music, as a soloist and member of the Tallahassee Community Chorus, as a staff singer in the St. John’s Episcopal Church choir, and on multiple Bach Parley concerts. Music director Valerie Arsenault says, “It’s amazing to see the ecstatic joy erupt on people’s faces when I tell them, ‘Reggie is coming!’”
With his home base in Boston, MA, Mobley sings prolifically all around the world with a vast variety of Early Music groups (too numerous to name here, but see www.ReginaldMobley.com). He has also been featured on several albums with the Monteverdi Choir and Sir John Eliot Gardiner, including a recording of Bach’s St Matthew Passion and Magnificat.
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Former Georgia CB Tyrique StevensonMichael Woods/Associated Press
The 2021 college football season will go down in history as the Year of the Transfer.
Because the 2020-21 academic year did not count against anyone s eligibility clock and because the NCAA finally approved the one-time free transfer proposal (undergraduates aren t required to sit out for a year if it s their first time transferring), transfers are taking place en masse.
The vast majority of those transfers will be either inconsequential or only mildly consequential, but a handful could make a College Football Playoff-altering impact in their new homes.
A player leaving one team to lead another to championship heights is not a new phenomenon. A former transfer won the Heisman Trophy in 2017, 2018 and 2019, after all. But it feels like there have already been at least five times as many Oh, wow, that s a huge pickup for an already solid team reactions to transfers as usual.
Deseret News
Tale of 2 receivers: Devaughn Vele a ‘secret weapon’ while Jaylen Dixon returns from transfer portal
Both will be counted on this fall to help fill the void left by two receivers who left the Utes for other programs
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Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
Two Utah wide receivers who have taken different journeys will be counted on to produce for the Utes this season.
And they’ll try to help fill the void left by wideouts Bryan Thompson and Samson Nacua, who left the program last winter.
Junior Jaylen Dixon entered the transfer portal in October 2020 but ended up withdrawing from the portal last February and returned to the Utes, something that had never been done before at the U.
Washington has a familiar name competing at quarterback but he might not be quite ready for prime time. Oregon is regrouping a bit after last year's starter bailed for the transfer portal — something that's also happening at Utah and Arizona. Quarterbacks across the league were hoping to impress their coaches before everyone heads off for the summer break.