A rare opportunity yesterday (25 June) for an evening meeting of York RMS. Fortuitous because it also followed a particularly humid day although it was pleasantly cool in the Music Room at Dower Court and the outlook from a large central window was sumptuous, the heavy growth of foliage on the trees had a three dimensional appearance as the landscape tapered and it was a pleasure to watch the fading daylight in the dusk.
As this was our penultimate meeting in the 2014/15 season, it was decided not to have a single speaker but to open the proceedings to an a la carte presentation by members. A neat opener with a sequence from the score for Wendy Toye's 1952 half-hour feature The Stranger Left No Card with Alan Badel as the visitor to a small community with sinister intentions, frequently shown on TV in the 60s and 70s and the jaunty score was heard regularly on Family Favourites over many years.
In turn, we also heard some pleasing Gounod, Holst, Grieg and Gershwin. I opted for a couple of tracks with the exquisite voice of Jarmila Novotna as I recently acquired a DVD on the Suprahon label which had a 90mins documentary with lots of archive material and first rate transfers of her operatic roles, including the RCA 1942 recording of Czechoslovakian Songs, titled Songs for Lidice in remembrance of the Nazi reprisals in wiping out a whole community after the assassination of the Gestapo General Heydrich; the accompanist was Jan Masaryk, son of the deposed President of Czechoslovakia. My personal memories were reflected by mid-80s visits to Prague and sitting near St Charles's Bridge over the Vltava, after concerts by Czech Phil and looking at the old town with wonder and upwards to the formidable castle against the skyline.
I was touched by Jarmila Novotna's mantra over many troubled years as an exile.
"Just finding courage to be who we are and love for all the natural and the beautiful.
The more responsible we are towards the truth, the deeper shall be our understanding of life. Then we come to realise that independence and contentment are the essence of a man's well being. Everybody holds the key to happiness. It is only about being unselfish and trying to make other people happy."
As this was our penultimate meeting in the 2014/15 season, it was decided not to have a single speaker but to open the proceedings to an a la carte presentation by members. A neat opener with a sequence from the score for Wendy Toye's 1952 half-hour feature The Stranger Left No Card with Alan Badel as the visitor to a small community with sinister intentions, frequently shown on TV in the 60s and 70s and the jaunty score was heard regularly on Family Favourites over many years.
In turn, we also heard some pleasing Gounod, Holst, Grieg and Gershwin. I opted for a couple of tracks with the exquisite voice of Jarmila Novotna as I recently acquired a DVD on the Suprahon label which had a 90mins documentary with lots of archive material and first rate transfers of her operatic roles, including the RCA 1942 recording of Czechoslovakian Songs, titled Songs for Lidice in remembrance of the Nazi reprisals in wiping out a whole community after the assassination of the Gestapo General Heydrich; the accompanist was Jan Masaryk, son of the deposed President of Czechoslovakia. My personal memories were reflected by mid-80s visits to Prague and sitting near St Charles's Bridge over the Vltava, after concerts by Czech Phil and looking at the old town with wonder and upwards to the formidable castle against the skyline.
I was touched by Jarmila Novotna's mantra over many troubled years as an exile.
"Just finding courage to be who we are and love for all the natural and the beautiful.
The more responsible we are towards the truth, the deeper shall be our understanding of life. Then we come to realise that independence and contentment are the essence of a man's well being. Everybody holds the key to happiness. It is only about being unselfish and trying to make other people happy."
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