Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
View Post
BBC Radio 3 Carol Competition
Collapse
X
-
Christmas "Carol" Competition.
Next year, can we please have a competition for a CAROL easy enough to be performed by an average school or church choir and which the congregation could pick up and join in with after two or three hearings?
The present through-composed part songs are not carols, and suitable only for a professional choir, often requiring a virtuoso accompanist.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by CallMePaul View PostI was very surprised at the result (Chris Black, the first setting to be performed). I found his setting very conservative and not appropriate for the text. Mayne the average R3 listener's tastes are not that different from what Classic FM says are its listeners' tastes?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by CallMePaul View PostI was very surprised at the result (Chris Black, the first setting to be performed). I found his setting very conservative and not appropriate for the text. Mayne the average R3 listener's tastes are not that different from what Classic FM says are its listeners' tastes?
It is a bit of a reversion to bland after last year’s (IMO) more worthy winner though.
Comment
-
-
Sorry, I wish I could be surprised. The predictable, anodyne tat, coupled with the BBC Singers 'execution' of the music, made this whole exercise a yawn.
AND that impoverishes the genre, demeans the BBCSs, and provides almost no way forward for choirs etc looking for new material. I simply cannot imagine any DoM with a half decent choir entertaining ANY of those carols, since heard in the context of other better known carols would pale into more or less instant amnesia. THat poem was too dull to set well. Shame - the poet is well-known, admired, so...........? [Shrug]
The last truly fine carol to have quite rightly gone into the repertory of many choirs is The Lamb.
And go back to Ceremony of Carols / Britten for a whole treasure trove of stuff.Last edited by DracoM; 20-12-19, 17:08.
Comment
-
-
As has been mentioned - the given text hardly leant itself to anything other than a rather dull setting - and, given it's a Breakfast initiative, there weren't going to be many amateur Bebop enthusiasts getting involved.
It doesn't matter - after this week, it'll never be heard again. Allow Dr Black his Dinner Party anecdote.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
So true!
Originally posted by Rover_KE View PostNext year, can we please have a competition for a CAROL easy enough to be performed by an average school or church choir and which the congregation could pick up and join in with after two or three hearings?
The present through-composed part songs are not carols, and suitable only for a professional choir, often requiring a virtuoso accompanist.
Comment
-
-
Carol settings are not really carols
Originally posted by cat View PostI hold the apparently unpopular opinion that a carol should be something one could envisage being sung on a doorstep or in a pub, whilst also being amenable to being arranged for a choir. This is why most of the traditional carols have ended up becoming traditional (with the exception of O Holy Night, which I'd rather was never sung congregationally ). Quite often new carols seems to follow the direction "compose anything at all which is SATB and where the text makes some mention of something Christmassy". The most recent exception to this I can think of is Berkeley's This Endernight which was the 2016 commission for King's.
Of the six entries here I note three of them exceed the maximum required length in the completion rules, which is 4:30 for the seven verses of text. It's no surprise then that most seem to concentrate on getting through all words, and is probably why they seem rather anodyne.
I totally concur........skilled though they are, the winning carols of the past few years sound rather "Un-Christmassy" and lack that memorable refrain and community spirit. There are so many amateur choirs looking for new music not just Christmas-themed works and a composer must learn to adapt his/her style to suit these requirements. I'm sure Holst and Vaughan Williams would agree!
Comment
-
-
The last truly fine carol to have quite rightly gone into the repertory of many choirs is The Lamb.
I'm not sure when John Gardner's Tomorrow Shall be my Dancing Day was written, but that gets a few feet tapping
You can keep his Holy and the Ivy though.
Comment
-
-
Well, here we are again, but this time it's different, in that this year, it's to be a congregation hymn, so perhaps needs to be simpler in character.
Fair enough.
But we've also entered a whole new world of patronising dumbing down, because all they want from "us" is the melody line. The rest will be sorted out by one of the BBC's chums. The idea that composition is restricted to just the tune is such a mind-bogglingly naïve concept. Of course it doesn't surprise me in the least. I wouldn't expect Suzie and the rest to allow anything else. WIll any self-respecting composer, amateur or otherwise, want to be part of this?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut we've also entered a whole new world of patronising dumbing down, because all they want from "us" is the melody line. The rest will be sorted out by one of the BBC's chums.
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWill any self-respecting composer, amateur or otherwise, want to be part of this?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWell, here we are again, but this time it's different, in that this year, it's to be a congregation hymn, so perhaps needs to be simpler in character.
Fair enough.
But we've also entered a whole new world of patronising dumbing down, because all they want from "us" is the melody line. The rest will be sorted out by one of the BBC's chums. The idea that composition is restricted to just the tune is such a mind-bogglingly naïve concept. Of course it doesn't surprise me in the least. I wouldn't expect Suzie and the rest to allow anything else. WIll any self-respecting composer, amateur or otherwise, want to be part of this?
Comment
-
Comment