Singing for Britten 16.08.14

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  • Eine Alpensinfonie
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 20570

    Singing for Britten 16.08.14

    It's a repeat, but perhaps worth listening to:

    Benjamin Britten was notoriously particular about the professional musicians he worked with (a close-knit circle of friends) and he had famously high musical standards. Yet all his life he embraced working with amateurs and children. John Bridcut tracks down amateur singers from Suffolk and beyond to share their experiences of singing for Britten - and to discover why it was so special.

    John Bridcut sang for Britten as a student in 1971, on the recording of Elgar's Dream of Gerontius. It's an experience he will never forget:

    'How I wish I could remember every moment of those recording sessions. But at the time I was far too busy getting the notes right. What has stayed with me is Britten's crystal-clear beat, and his nervous intensity. He demanded the most of you. When he first appeared, he greeted our chorus master with a kiss on both cheeks - that sort of thing was quite rare in those days - and the whole of the London Symphony Chorus cheered!'

    John returns to Suffolk, to Britten's Snape Maltings, to swap memories with two fellow singers from that summer more than forty years ago. He also talks to long-standing members of Britten's 'house choir', the Aldeburgh Festival Singers; Suffolk children who sang for Britten in the 1940s and 1950s; and two retired doctors who've not seen each other since they sang on Britten's celebrated recording of his War Requiem as schoolboys.

    Britten worked with amateur singers right to the end of his career. John Bridcut asks what he drew from them, and why working with amateurs was so central to his vision of music being 'useful, and to the living'.
  • hmvman
    Full Member
    • Mar 2007
    • 1099

    #2
    I enjoyed this programme when it was on as part of the Britten Centenary weekend last November. I shall certainly listen to this repeat.

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    • ferneyhoughgeliebte
      Gone fishin'
      • Sep 2011
      • 30163

      #3
      I love the story of Britten conducting the recording of St Nicholas, and slowing down at one passage so that a particular member of the chorus had time to turn the page. "Let's see what the Musicologists make of that!" the composer wrily remarked.
      [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

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      • Mary Chambers
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 1963

        #4
        I enjoyed it. Lucky, lucky people. I'm the right age to have been one of them, but unfortunately lived in the wrong place. Was quite surprised John Rutter wasn't in it, because I think he sang with the Highgate boys on the War Requiem recording. It was more interesting, though, to have people we know nothing much about.

        I remember the first time I heard this programme being a bit shocked that the presents Britten gave to the children in The Little Sweep were propelling pencils for the boys and sewing kits for the girls! I imagine his sister thought of that. It was usual in those days. Oddly enough, I was in hospital at Christmas that year (1949) and was given a present from the tree in the ward - a sewing kit and needlecase. Even more oddly, since I have never willingly sewn a stitch in my life, I treasured it for years. I was nine years old. (Not really relevant, I know, but an indication of the attitude to girls at that time.)

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        • Richard Tarleton

          #5
          Originally posted by Mary Chambers View Post
          I

          I remember the first time I heard this programme being a bit shocked that the presents Britten gave to the children in The Little Sweep were propelling pencils for the boys and sewing kits for the girls! I imagine his sister thought of that. It was usual in those days. Oddly enough, I was in hospital at Christmas that year (1949) and was given a present from the tree in the ward - a sewing kit and needlecase. Even more oddly, since I have never willingly sewn a stitch in my life, I treasured it for years. I was nine years old. (Not really relevant, I know, but an indication of the attitude to girls at that time.)
          Yes I hadn't heard the term hussif for a while.

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          • Mary Chambers
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 1963

            #6
            Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
            Yes I hadn't heard the term hussif for a while.
            My mother had a book from her childhood containing instructions for making a 'red satin housewife'. It puzzled me very much until she explained!

            I liked the two retired doctors singing 'their bit' from War Requiem (if I've remembered correctly who did what).

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            • Richard Tarleton

              #7
              Originally posted by Mary Chambers View Post
              I liked the two retired doctors singing 'their bit' from War Requiem (if I've remembered correctly who did what).
              And the humming school music master who brought the recording to a halt - more than once

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