Agree with the above but oddly I missed the coughing and rustling of a congregation sharing the service with me. I liked the tweaks to the Bidding prayer and the extra choir pieces between the two final hymns. It will be good to have further tweaks in future years to keep things fresh, now it’s been done once. IMHO there’s only a ‘big 2’ for descants.
A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols [L] 25.xii.2020
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostDon't agree: the engineers made absolutely clear the CHOIR shuffling paper, rising, sitting - to keep that freshness in our ear.
PS: Reminder: R3 tomorrow - Christmas Day - will have BOTH vols."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Agree with all the above ... an astonishing service given the extreme difficulty of presenting it this year. May I just give a shout-out for Christopher Robinson's descant for v.6 of Adeste, fideles (missed by Alpie above) - so good to hear that again ... reminded me of Windsor days! I would have preferred the Willcocks last verse for that hymn, but you can't always have everything! Happy Christmas everyone.
RJ
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Originally posted by Roger Judd View PostMay I just give a shout-out for Christopher Robinson's descant for v.6 of Adeste, fideles (missed by Alpie above) - so good to hear that again ... reminded me of Windsor days!
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostAgree with the above but oddly I missed the coughing and rustling of a congregation sharing the service with me. I liked the tweaks to the Bidding prayer and the extra choir pieces between the two final hymns. It will be good to have further tweaks in future years to keep things fresh, now it’s been done once. IMHO there’s only a ‘big 2’ for descants.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI also wondered if the lessons were read 'on site' because they had a slightly 'dead' quality about them both acoustically and in terms of the actual reading.
Gorgeous singing and engineering of the music. Speaking in total ignorance of the tempo indications in the scores, I felt that a couple of carols could have benefitted from a slightly more sprightly pace/pulse (Adam lay ybounden, for instance, and the Luto Holly & the Ivy)..."...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..."
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So judging by the foregoing none of you were aware of the fairly severe network processing that Radio 4 inflicted on the service.....? Constant and very obvious audio compression and limiting on the louder parts? As though the singing was constantly bumping its head against a level constraint?
I only heard the last half hour and will listen to the repeat tomorrow, where there should of course be no processing (apart from on FM) as it's on Radio 3, so we should get a better idea of what it really sounded like, particularly in order to compare this year's sound, recorded as it was by non-BBC staff.
That criticism of the BBC-inflicted compression apart, what I heard was uplifting, professional, and as good as it gets in the circumstances.
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Originally posted by mw963 View PostSo judging by the foregoing none of you were aware of the fairly severe network processing that Radio 4 inflicted on the service.....? Constant and very obvious audio compression and limiting on the louder parts? As though the singing was constantly bumping its head against a level constraint?
I only heard the last half hour and will listen to the repeat tomorrow, where there should of course be no processing (apart from on FM) as it's on Radio 3, so we should get a better idea of what it really sounded like, particularly in order to compare this year's sound, recorded as it was by non-BBC staff.
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A truly remarkable sound: kudos to Daniel Hyde and all the team!
But let me share some sparse thought about some details (no complaint intended!):
- "Adam lay ybounden" is marked Allegretto (108 the crotchet): I think that it really benefits from a slower performance, but today's tempo was exceedingly slow and unbearable. Also the leading tenor part in "and all was for an apple" was choked by the upper voices
- I am also amongst the ones who felt the absence of the congregation in the hymn singing, but more deeply felt the absence of the choral harmonies (and of the organ Tuba...) in Willcocks' last verse of "Of the Father’s heart begotten".
- being used to the Pearsall's original "In Dulci jubilo" this rearranged version with reduced parts sounded quite thin: other simpler 4-parts arrangements of this melody (from Bach and Buxtehude to Ledger, Chilcott and Moore...) are available: they would have surely worked better
- the organ interlude between "Still, still, still" and "Hark! The herald" was quite meaningless, and in general I found the organ playing quite resigned and without grit...
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostWho are the non-BBC staff you refer too?
Unlike similar choirs e.g. New College and Westminster Abbey who tend to record albums away from home in chapels and churches with friendlier acoustics, and with third-party producers, King’s do all theirs in situ. They therefore have a pretty good handle on how to do things themselves.
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Originally posted by mw963 View PostSo judging by the foregoing none of you were aware of the fairly severe network processing that Radio 4 inflicted on the service.....? Constant and very obvious audio compression and limiting on the louder parts? As though the singing was constantly bumping its head against a level constraint?
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI also wondered if the lessons were read 'on site' because they had a slightly 'dead' quality about them both acoustically and in terms of the actual reading.Last edited by cat; 25-12-20, 07:17.
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Just listening back to the Sussex Carol and comparing it to past years - I noticed DH uses the version that omits the "so" from "Then why should men on earth be so sad", which is perhaps in keeping with the much reduced tempo. In Carols from King's last year he took 2:24 compared to SC's 1:42! However perhaps he decided that was a little too slow, because in this 9LC it's done in 2:05.
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