"Singing for Britten"

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  • JimD
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 267

    "Singing for Britten"

    I didn't catch it all, but enjoyed what I heard of this programme:

    John Bridcut explores Britten's creative relationship with amateur singers.


    I'm not sure how good BB was at raising a laugh, but he did so during a rehearsal of (I think) the War Requiem, by asking the boys' choir not to sound as if they were enjoying it: 'it's modern music, you're not meant to enjoy it'. (This is definitely a paraphrase, not verbatim. For much modern music I fear he wouldn't have needed to tell them.) I was touched by his enthusiasm and care for the young amateur singers, and the tributes to the care and precision of his guidance: obviously cherished memories. It was also interesting to hear aural evidence supporting both those who found him 'stern', and those who didn't.
  • Mary Chambers
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1963

    #2
    He told them not to make the music sound nice (they were English choir boys, after all) - "It isn't nice. It's horrid. It's modern music." Big laugh from assembled company.

    I'd sung the War Requiem a couple of times before those rehearsal recordings were issued. I wish I'd heard his instructions about the 'Pleni sunt coeli'. Something to the effect that if you were singing the same as your neighbour, you were getting it wrong. I always found that bit rather tricky, but that makes it crystal clear.

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    • ostuni
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 550

      #3
      'chanting freely'

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