Originally posted by DracoM
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CE: St Paul’s Church, Knightsbridge, London 15.ii.23
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Originally posted by mw963 View PostI've more or less stopped posting here as it's often so argumentative, but it also goes hand in hand with my having stopped listening to CE. Why? Because - here we are, half way through February - and we have yet to have a Cathedral relay in 2023.
And the few Cathedral broadcasts we get almost always seem to be "Festivals", often with mixed top lines (which for me is the worst of all worlds, I'm fine with one choir or the other when there are two), and far far away from an "eavesdropped wet-Thursday-afternoon Evensong", as it's often described here.
I'm also getting a bit fed up with the apologists for the BBC on here, constantly looking for excuses for what to me looks like a gradual trashing of what I understand by the idea of a radio Choral Evensong. Oh, and the BBC staff of course do actually get paid fairly well (which wasn't the case thirty years ago).
I have less of a problem with the idea of recording CEs, as has been stated it's vanishingly rare for retakes to be done, but like S H Otley the end result is the same for me - another listener who has given up, and who - in spite of not finding the medium so easy - is trying to get into the habit of going to cathedrals via their webcasts.
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Owain Park’s stars have well and truly risen both as composer and conductor. The BBCS often sound uncomfortable singing liturgical music in a worship setting but here they sounded as if they were a top class choir singing at an Oxbridge college, and that is meant as a great compliment to a group that has to adapt to all styles. Much of this is down Park I’m sure, with excellent choices of music that were fresh and stimulating in the CE context and sung with a straight sound. The Shepherd Responses are always a sheer joy to hear. The singers could be suitably romantic in the anthem with additional brass colours. Not a great Parry piece IMO but crowned with the splendid tune to ‘O praise ye the Lord’, the last verse a taxing pedal part on the organ I find!! All fun though.
Do organ and brass blend together? Not really as shown in the final voluntary with wincing intonation clashes. The pictures show a large congregation present and they joined lustily in the hymn. A rewarding CE.
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Not really as shown in the final voluntary with wincing intonation clashes.
I enjopyed the service very much. But it probably did not tick the boxes of our more traditional forumistas that (a) prefer services to concerts (b) like things live and (c) like cathedrals on wet weekday afternoons.
To be picky (as I often am) one soprano in the BBCS anticipated the starts of phrases on a few occasions. We're talking microseconds here.
PS Glad the Ash Wednesday service is coming live from St John's again next week.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostSounds like a CE Fest. The BBC obviously isn't obsessed with saving a penny or two as some have suggested.
So, far from appearing to be pushing the cost boat out, it's the opposite. And, on top of that, it was even cheaper because it was recorded, saving the cost of live links back to Broadcasting House.
I don't know if a congregation was present but, all in all, it was therefore yet another concocted broadcast for radio and far from what I delight in: eaves-dropping on a live act of worship sung by a choir which sings for its local community, day in day out, whether the mics are there or not. With so few places where our age-old choral tradition is still being supported (ie cathedrals) getting a broadcast slot these days (because of cost), Radio 3 is, in essence, creating a 'premier league' of cheap (if usually good) choirs without supporting the grassroots. (Of course, the question is, is it Radio 3's responsibility to!)
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Originally posted by jonfan View Posthttps://twitter.com/BBCSingers/statu...799619/photo/3
A link to a picture taken after the service, receiving due applause.
A former Dean of ours once asked, from the pulpit, members of the congregation not to applaud the organist after the closing voluntary. Unfortunately, it has become the norm.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post…which makes it seem even more like a concert.
A former Dean of ours once asked, from the pulpit, members of the congregation not to applaud the organist after the closing voluntary. Unfortunately, it has become the norm.
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As an organist I play quiet, slow moving music at the start of a service for preparation for worship, usually ruined by loud greetings at the back which initiate general conversation. At the end of the service I play something louder and faster, but then attended by loud chatter over coffee. A no win situation but the only piece that keeps everyone quiet is Nimrod, but I can’t play that every week.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostTo be picky (as I often am) one soprano in the BBCS anticipated the starts of phrases on a few occasions. We're talking microseconds here.
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I've heard brass used very effectively for services before*, but it does seem a bit unusual to have the players twiddling their thumbs (or waiting in a nearby pub) until the final hymn and voluntary. Partly for that reason the service didn't feel very cohesive to me, although most of the music wasn't my cup of tea so that's probably my fault.
*(A recorded example for those interested would be The Tudor Choir Book CD on Convivium Records which contains morning and evening canticles plus a number of anthems and psalms, all with period brass, and organ etc)Last edited by cat; 16-02-23, 12:39.
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