Originally posted by Magnificat
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CE King's College, Cambridge. Wed, 4th March
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Magnificat
Originally posted by Caussade View PostSo St Alban's don't do the Howells responses because they lack the necessary rehearsal time, but everyone else shies away from difficult repertoire because they're too lazy to bother teaching it to their choirs, being endowed with all the rehearsal time they could possibly want. Yes, I'm sure that must be it.
I said that there are many reasons why DoMs might not want to teach choristers a difficult piece and that an element of laziness may be one of these.
I have no idea why they don't do it at St Albans but they certainly do not have the luxury of the rehearsal time they have in Oxbridge or London for example.
I wish people would read what I write rather than try to put words in my mouth.
VCC
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Originally posted by Magnificat View PostCaussade,
I said that there are many reasons why DoMs might not want to teach choristers a difficult piece and that an element of laziness may be one of these.
I wish people would read what I write rather than try to put words in my mouth.
VCC
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light_calibre_baritone
VCC - Branding some DoMs as lazy is rather questionable. I suggest you get back to us once you've spent a few days running a cathedral or cathedral-like choir.
There's also such a thing as 'repertoire' for most choirs. You spice things up around your library of standard works... But you know that.
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Simon Biazeck
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostTrying to keep things calm, folks, I am reminded of adverts that Lincoln Cathedral used to place in the local press for (e.g.) 'a bass lay clerk who can also undertake plumbing work in the cathedral'.
On the subject of Howells' Responses, I tried to get Barry Rose to do them once and he said they were too long and complicated to fit into a normal evensong...rather reflecting Simon's view of them in #7
I think Barry Rose's response to you was perfectly reasonable. The Howells set, alas, is not going to get a regular outing, despite the glorious harmony and counterpoint.
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Simon Biazeck
Originally posted by DracoM View PostMany DoMs must wish they had to hand precisely the choir to sing everything, clergy and congregations to appreciate it, and above all the money to constantly replenish stocks of 'repertoire'. A juggling act deserving sympathy, I would suggest.
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My grandfather was very good friends with Watkins Shaw, with whom I spent many afternoons chatting about music. He always said that after Smith his favourite responses were Clucas, because they were engaging musically but were also liturgically perfect. I remember asking him about the Howells, and he said (I paraphrase) "wonderful music, awful responses".
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Magnificat
Originally posted by DracoM View PostMany DoMs must wish they had to hand precisely the choir to sing everything, clergy and congregations to appreciate it, and above all the money to constantly replenish stocks of 'repertoire'. A juggling act deserving sympathy, I would suggest.
Don't forget that it is not the professionals in cathedral music departments or the clergy who raise the money to keep them going. It is, in the main, the amateur enthusiasts and volunteers of cathedral music trusts who do this hard work
Sometimes, it seems to me, the often superhuman efforts of members of cathedral congregations in this regard are not appreciated by DoMs and Deans and Chapters with their desire to keep the music and the types of services in which it is sung entirely to themselves.
It is usually just Eucharists and Evensong. Get rid of Matins and all the all the wonderful music that goes with it ( modern clergy don't like it and it makes life easier for the musicians) but which many of the congregation still want to hear sung as much as Mass settings.
Why shouldn't the congregation who provide so much of the finance have a say in this and be able to tell the musicians and clergy to give as well as take and put in a bit more effort as far as the music is concerned.
VCC
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Originally posted by Magnificat View Post...Get rid of Matins...
You used to be able to tell by looking at the board outside just how 'high' any Anglican church was, by the services it offered.
That was even before you stepped inside and smelt the incense (or not) - though not many cathedrals have got as far as incense AFAIK.
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Originally posted by jean View PostMatins (or even Mattins) was doomed when the Eucharist became the main morning service, when everything edged in a more high-church direction.
You used to be able to tell by looking at the board outside just how 'high' any Anglican church was, by the services it offered.
That was even before you stepped inside and smelt the incense (or not) - though not many cathedrals have got as far as incense AFAIK.
It used to be at 11.15, but these days is at 9.15 which makes rather more sense.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Magnificat View PostDraco et al
Don't forget that it is not the professionals in cathedral music departments or the clergy who raise the money to keep them going. It is, in the main, the amateur enthusiasts and volunteers of cathedral music trusts who do this hard work
Sometimes, it seems to me, the often superhuman efforts of members of cathedral congregations in this regard are not appreciated by DoMs and Deans and Chapters with their desire to keep the music and the types of services in which it is sung entirely to themselves.
It is usually just Eucharists and Evensong. Get rid of Matins and all the all the wonderful music that goes with it ( modern clergy don't like it and it makes life easier for the musicians) but which many of the congregation still want to hear sung as much as Mass settings.
Why shouldn't the congregation who provide so much of the finance have a say in this and be able to tell the musicians and clergy to give as well as take and put in a bit more effort as far as the music is concerned.
VCC
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Originally posted by jean View PostSense? In what sense?
As a service " belonging to the morning", or whatever other description one picks from those available, it always seemed a bit odd having it drifting past Mid day, and starting after Eucharist which began at 10.00I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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The trouble is, many cathedrals and parish churches now have a morning service which tries to encompass both...e.g. it may start with some responses and a Psalm and then morph into Eucharist. That plus a sermon makes it last at least an hour and a half...a strain on the bladders of elderly Anglicans if nothing else.
As far as:
but most of the 19th and early 20th C Matins repertoire is musically dismal,
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