For the record, in case of doubt, I was simply responding to the indignant clamour from some quarters proclaiming "SC must be given a knighthood immediately, and the fact that he has not yet been given one is because most people are blatantly prejudiced against King's and have a massive chip on their shoulder and are utterly ungracious..." (collated paraphrase). Personally I'm not one for putting a lot of store by the honours system, especially when it becomes a tool of coercion and placating the manifestly dishonourable. But that's another issue.
Don't forget also that in the aforementioned Facebook group, when Dan Hyde's appointment was announced, there were a good few people who were expressing genuine outrage and disgust that SC might even be permitted to retire (!), saying that it was a complete betrayal and the idea that anything about King's should ever be allowed to change in any way at all was just an affront and the wilful destruction of something utterly sacrosanct. They pounced on an interview with Dan Hyde as evidence that he was going to destroy all of SC's work, deliberately, by bringing in all sorts of new-fangled, alien and totally unwelcome ideas and innovations. I thought this just about summed up the mentality of these people. Dan Hyde was, of course, one of SC's most eminent and highly respected organ scholars at King's, and has a very intimate understanding indeed of what works and what does not work there, and subsequently he has had a great deal of success in training the choirs at Jesus Cambridge, Magdalen Oxford and St Thomas Fifth Avenue. But in the eyes of a certain hard core the fact that he is not SC is enough to condemn him. I think that is appalling, not least because SC has had an extremely impressive tenure of 37 years and is now a sick man and needs and deserves to retire and hand over to his excellent successor and be celebrated for what he has done over the decades. King's is a living tradition, and its most die-hard supporters need to let it continue to thrive.
Personally I couldn't care less about whether or not X, Y or Z choir gets a lot of exposure in the media. I'd be loath to see the annual King's broadcasts reduced, because they mean so much to so many people, although the blanket fawning coverage of King's in magazines and newspapers, always accompanied by interminable arguments about choristers between hard-line lobbies who oppose each other on principle, is at least potentially a bit of an irritant for those of us who are actually in the business, as is seems to happen every single year, just at the time when we are most busy and most stressed. None of us are in the business for exposure or accolades. But at the same time it does grate when the general public only ever gets to hear a tiny handful of choirs on anything like a regular basis, and one choir in particular, and then assumes that these choirs, and that one choir in particular, are the only ones which are any good and the only ones which deserve to exist. It doesn't really matter, as those who really care about these things find ways of informing themselves about "other" choirs. (Long live BBC Radio 3 Choral Evensong broadcasts, and this forum!) But the automatic assumption of excellence based on a shared quality (for example, being an Oxbridge college choir) has an opposite, the automatic assumption of mediocrity based on the lack of a shared quality (for example, NOT being an Oxbridge college choir or one of the few cathedral or equivalent choirs which are widely known to be excellent). This is much more of a problem than a lot of people realise. It's only half nice when people hear your choir and say "oh, that was actually decent, I thought you were supposed to be terrible"...
Don't forget also that in the aforementioned Facebook group, when Dan Hyde's appointment was announced, there were a good few people who were expressing genuine outrage and disgust that SC might even be permitted to retire (!), saying that it was a complete betrayal and the idea that anything about King's should ever be allowed to change in any way at all was just an affront and the wilful destruction of something utterly sacrosanct. They pounced on an interview with Dan Hyde as evidence that he was going to destroy all of SC's work, deliberately, by bringing in all sorts of new-fangled, alien and totally unwelcome ideas and innovations. I thought this just about summed up the mentality of these people. Dan Hyde was, of course, one of SC's most eminent and highly respected organ scholars at King's, and has a very intimate understanding indeed of what works and what does not work there, and subsequently he has had a great deal of success in training the choirs at Jesus Cambridge, Magdalen Oxford and St Thomas Fifth Avenue. But in the eyes of a certain hard core the fact that he is not SC is enough to condemn him. I think that is appalling, not least because SC has had an extremely impressive tenure of 37 years and is now a sick man and needs and deserves to retire and hand over to his excellent successor and be celebrated for what he has done over the decades. King's is a living tradition, and its most die-hard supporters need to let it continue to thrive.
Personally I couldn't care less about whether or not X, Y or Z choir gets a lot of exposure in the media. I'd be loath to see the annual King's broadcasts reduced, because they mean so much to so many people, although the blanket fawning coverage of King's in magazines and newspapers, always accompanied by interminable arguments about choristers between hard-line lobbies who oppose each other on principle, is at least potentially a bit of an irritant for those of us who are actually in the business, as is seems to happen every single year, just at the time when we are most busy and most stressed. None of us are in the business for exposure or accolades. But at the same time it does grate when the general public only ever gets to hear a tiny handful of choirs on anything like a regular basis, and one choir in particular, and then assumes that these choirs, and that one choir in particular, are the only ones which are any good and the only ones which deserve to exist. It doesn't really matter, as those who really care about these things find ways of informing themselves about "other" choirs. (Long live BBC Radio 3 Choral Evensong broadcasts, and this forum!) But the automatic assumption of excellence based on a shared quality (for example, being an Oxbridge college choir) has an opposite, the automatic assumption of mediocrity based on the lack of a shared quality (for example, NOT being an Oxbridge college choir or one of the few cathedral or equivalent choirs which are widely known to be excellent). This is much more of a problem than a lot of people realise. It's only half nice when people hear your choir and say "oh, that was actually decent, I thought you were supposed to be terrible"...
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