If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I have woken up to the fact (thank you Martin Handley) that Stephen had been Organ Scholar at my own College, St John's, though I cannot be sure I ever heard him play, as he is three years younger than I. I have not followed his career, though of course have heard much that he has conducted on Radio Three, but I have been moved by the tributes from David Hill, Judith Weir, Martin Handley, Sarah Walker and others this morning.
The death of Stephen Cleobury was announced on 24 November 2019. This interview is from December 2018, as he was preparing for what was to be his last Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols
A moving tribute, a performance of the Ley/Henry VI Founder’s Prayer, was posted on the choir Twitter feed this morning, for those with access to such things: https://twitter.com/choirofkingscam/...757760001?s=21 Stephen Cleobury’s widow Emma replied that it was the last piece of music he listened to on Friday....
I also found touching, funny and real a post by a former KCC chorister and organ scholar:
I can’t help but imagine Stephen Cleobury’s first Sunday in heaven. The choir of angels haven’t properly prepared the plainsong and are now crapping themselves.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I also found touching, funny and real a post by a former KCC chorister and organ scholar:
I can’t help but imagine Stephen Cleobury’s first Sunday in heaven. The choir of angels haven’t properly prepared the plainsong and are now crapping themselves.
Matthew 22:30 has it that "... they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven... "
But clearly those at King's believe the angels retain other basic human functions
I can only reiterate what others have said. It is so sad that he was not able to enjoy his well-earned retirement - although I wonder whether perhaps he might have preferred not to retire at all.
I can only reiterate what others have said. It is so sad that he was not able to enjoy his well-earned retirement - although I wonder whether perhaps he might have preferred not to retire at all.
I do wonder that myself.
Like others I have long been familiar with his recordings and videos, and was able to attend several CEs at Cambridge. KCC toured the States (where I am based) several years ago and I was fortunate to attend one of those concerts. Strolling around at intermission one saw a who's who of local church musicians.
This was a particularly poignant CE for me -I recall the original broadcast- and the Brahms even more heart wrenching. (It works decently on piano four hands.) Sorry that there were some uncomfortable moments on the other thread, I preferred to post here.
It is a somewhat poignant co-incidence that December's Choir & Organ magazine reviews the recent book Christmas Eve at King's: 100 Yeras of Nine Lessons and Carols. Author Timothy Rogers mentions especially the commissioning of carols by contemporary composers under Stephen Cleobury's tenure.
Anna Lapwood devoted her hour-long BBC Radio Cambridgeshire show last night to the memory of Stephen. It includes early recordings he made such as at Westminster Cathedral, and a 1960 In The Bleak Mid Winter that (presumably) features him singing as a treble.
Comment