The benefits and privileges of being a chorister

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  • ardcarp
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11102

    The benefits and privileges of being a chorister

    Alexander Armstrong's excellent speech on 'The Privilege of Choristership' at the recent Cathedral Music Trust concert at St Paul's.

    "Your Royal Highness, my Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen: good evening! What a spectacular event this is and what a great honour it is to be a part of it. I am thrilled to be here. Moreover, I am delighted to have the opportunity to talk to you briefly about the tremendous privilege of choristership: the single greatest leg-up a child can be given in life.
    Now, I know that sounds overblown and, yes, it is a bold claim but the more I think about it the truer I realise it is. Someone made the mistake of asking me during an interview the other day what the benefits are of being a chorister. Well that interview ended up overrunning by half of an hour and I was barely halfway through my list.
    The most obvious benefit is the total submersion in music. This is a ‘compleat’ musical education by process of osmosis. When you come to hang up your cassock for the final time at the age of 13 you will – without even having realised it was happening because you were just having a lovely time singing – have personal experience of every age and fashion of music from the ancient fauxbourdons of plainchant, to the exciting knotty textures of anthems so contemporary that the composers themselves might very well have conducted you. You will have breathed life into everyone from Buxtehude to Britten to Bach to Bridge to Bax to Brahms to Byrd to Bairstow to Bruckner to Bliss (and that’s just the Bs I can think of off the top of my head). But you will know them, know them and love them in the way only a performer truly can. Choral music, to this day, has the power to move me so profoundly that I can lose myself in it for hours and just ride out the happy contemplations it evokes. It is a constant and lifelong tiding of comfort and – euphoric – joy.
    Then there is the musicianship you absorb as a chorister, not just the music theory, the maths (the Italian!) all of which is very useful, but elegant musical phrasing, the projection of good diction, the shaping of beautiful vowel sounds for optimum tone, the careful precision singing a psalm, which can only be achieved by listening intently to those around you and blending your tone and rhythm with theirs – all of these skills and sensitivities become second nature and all of them have strange and unexpected use and resonance in later life.
    And then there’s the language – and I don’t mean the salty badinage of the vestry but the liturgy you’re immersed in, the psalms, the collects, the canticles – the poetry you get to sing (Herbert, Donne, Milton, Shakespeare, Hardy, Auden are all poets I first learnt to love – Christopher Smart even – by singing and performing their words). Your lexicon at the age of 13 is astounding, and your turn of phrase, taught by endless psalms and hymns, and not just the range of your vocabulary but your innate sense of the poetic. You will have come to know only too well the powerful quiet of an evensong, the sumptuous echo of a final amen sung from an ante-chapel but rolling around the clerestory like wine in a taster’s glass.
    And let’s not overlook the discipline of choristership; the order it brings to a young person’s often chaotic life, the friendship, the focus. Punctuality is one of the first lessons you learn: the ignominy of arriving even a minute late is something no chorister wants to experience twice. Then self-possession, decorum and grace are all attributes you quickly learn to fake – in the first instance – before adopting them for real as you gradually mature. But where else in the modern world is a child taught gravitas? Where else is a child taught, for example, to bow with proper dignity and humility?
    I owe my entire career to my experience as a chorister. It was where I learnt to perform, where I learnt to use the full range of my voice; where I learnt to listen, where I learnt to write comedy, where I learnt to carry a pencil at all times – but most importantly it was where I learnt the wonderful truth that something exceptional, something as beautiful as anything anywhere, can be created just by you and your friends. I remember on a choir tour to Salamanca (ooh travel there’s another benefit!) exploring the old cathedral with a couple of friends and finding ourselves alone in some sort of chapter house, we fired off a Boyce 3-part canon just to test the acoustics. A terrible, toe-curlingly self-indulgent thing to do but what a sound we made! And what a thing to discover: that we three – children essentially – carried between us all the components of something so joyous, so perfect, so complete. (And Boyce! There we are, there’s another B for my list.)
    I was lucky enough to be a chorister at St Mary’s Cathedral in Edinburgh which had a good mix of boy and girl choristers as is now fairly typical in cathedrals up and down the country. And both there and at Trinity College, Cambridge where I ended up as a choral scholar, I sang with people from all walks of life (many of whom had their entire educations – at some of the country’s best schools I might add – paid for by the music they had first learnt as choristers). I sang alongside some people of different faiths and plenty of none at all. And I am always heartened by the ethnic diversity in our cathedral and college choir rooms. So you see, you don’t need to be a boy to be a chorister, you don’t need to be a toff to be a chorister, you don’t need to be religious, you don’t even need to be Christian. Although as I say that I’m aware there is a certain spirituality that all choristers come to know well – something that lurks in the silences of a darkening nave while rush-hour traffic chugs about just yards outside the West door. A spirituality that is wrapped up in the ritual, the mystery and the beauty of this ancient tradition we have become part of. And I’m going to call that spirituality The Privilege of Choristership. That is what we are here tonight to celebrate and to preserve for the future, ‘throughout all generations’."
  • DracoM
    Host
    • Mar 2007
    • 12994

    #2

    Comment

    • Ein Heldenleben
      Full Member
      • Apr 2014
      • 6964

      #3
      Excellent summation . Such a shame that choral singing isn’t the centre (yes I really mean it the centre ) of education rather than peripheral.

      Comment

      • Bella Kemp
        Full Member
        • Aug 2014
        • 481

        #4
        Absolutely wonderful. I had always thought of him as rather silly, having seen his tv broadcasts and - dare I say it - heard his presenting on Classic FM; but it's always good to have one's idle prejudices overturned.

        Comment

        • teamsaint
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 25231

          #5
          I was a chorister at Salisbury in the early 70s. I don’t disagree with much in the article , and it was an extraordinary life with many incredible high points. Don’t regret a moment of it, all my friends left the choir with heavy hearts. But it was an extremely tough regime ,IMO too tough, hopefully todays boys and girls choirs have the burden shared.

          Sunday. 8.45 Full Choir practice.
          10.00 Eucharist.

          11.15 cup of tea in Chapter House.
          11.30 Matins
          12.00 leave Matins.
          2.30 full practice
          3.00 Evensong

          7.00 school Compline service.
          8.30 bed.

          We had to eat as well…….

          I don’t recall that we did instrumental practice on a Sunday, weekdays it was 7.30 to 8.00 , before choir practice at about 8.30

          Almost every spare moment, and there weren’t many , was spent playing football.
          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.

          Comment

          • cloughie
            Full Member
            • Dec 2011
            • 22205

            #6
            Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
            I was a chorister at Salisbury in the early 70s. I don’t disagree with much in the article , and it was an extraordinary life with many incredible high points. Don’t regret a moment of it, all my friends left the choir with heavy hearts. But it was an extremely tough regime ,IMO too tough, hopefully todays boys and girls choirs have the burden shared.

            Sunday. 8.45 Full Choir practice.
            10.00 Eucharist.

            11.15 cup of tea in Chapter House.
            11.30 Matins
            12.00 leave Matins.
            2.30 full practice
            3.00 Evensong

            7.00 school Compline service.
            8.30 bed.

            We had to eat as well…….

            I don’t recall that we did instrumental practice on a Sunday, weekdays it was 7.30 to 8.00 , before choir practice at about 8.30

            Almost every spare moment, and there weren’t many , was spent playing football.
            Do you sing much now, ts?

            Comment

            • Serial_Apologist
              Full Member
              • Dec 2010
              • 37855

              #7
              Having been a chorister myself, I enjoyed his pitch!

              Comment

              • Vox Humana
                Full Member
                • Dec 2012
                • 1253

                #8
                I thought it a quite wonderful speech. There are some children who find it difficult to cope, for various reasons, and I wouldn't claim that it's for everyone, but, generally speaking, surely it really is the best start in life you can get?

                Comment

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