CE St Edmundsbury Cathedral 26th September 2012

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  • ardcarp
    Late member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11102

    #46
    I was very surprised to hear this tune in a non-Catholic context.
    Tunes, surely, cross the Catholic/Protestant divide quite readily? As a postgrad student, I taught part-time at a Convent school and part of my duties included playing for some of the Chapel services, always under the watchful eye of a moustachio-ed sister/chaperone. Having been reared as a prot, this was quite a new experience, but I can clearly recall the first hymn that was thrust at me, Mary Immaculate, Star of the Morning. It was sung to the same tune as Brightest and Best...the lovely Bach-harmonised Lutheran chorale. And, boy, could those girls sing!

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    • Mr Stoat

      #47
      Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
      Tunes, surely, cross the Catholic/Protestant divide quite readily? As a postgrad student, I taught part-time at a Convent school and part of my duties included playing for some of the Chapel services, always under the watchful eye of a moustachio-ed sister/chaperone. Having been reared as a prot, this was quite a new experience, but I can clearly recall the first hymn that was thrust at me, Mary Immaculate, Star of the Morning. It was sung to the same tune as Brightest and Best...the lovely Bach-harmonised Lutheran chorale. And, boy, could those girls sing!
      "Stella" has appeared in a number of books of many denominations. I just randomly picked up AMR and it is there at No 203

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      • Simon

        #48
        Originally posted by Miles Coverdale View Post
        Blessed be the God and Father, probably.

        Indeed.

        Also abbreviated as BB the G&F, at least when it has been mentioned in the past on here.

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        • jean
          Late member
          • Nov 2010
          • 7100

          #49
          Catholics have adopted a lot of Protestant tunes in recent years, although of course many Anglican tunes especially are adaptations of original plainsong melodies, but there's not been so much traffic the other way I'd say - probably because modern Catholic hymns are mostly so horrible.

          This one was first published in Henri Frederick Hemy's Easy Hymn Tunes for Catholic Schools (1851), (it says here).

          I'd never heard it to another text, and I was interested in the Stella coincidence

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          • Roger Judd
            Full Member
            • Apr 2012
            • 232

            #50
            Irritatingly I was relying on iPlayer to hear this one. I heard up to the second lesson, but on picking up the thread later was denied, being told that I needed to upgrade the technology, which my ageing Mac couldn't support. What I did manage to hear made this all the more frustrating, because up to that point the service was being really well put across - I especially enjoyed the introit, and the unmannered delivery of the Psalm - as an earlier writer said, there was a real sense of listening in to the daily offering.

            It is greatly to St Edmundsbury's credit that they can broadcast so confidently so early in the term - congratulations to all involved - I wish i could have heard it all.

            à propos the side theme of coldness in church, having been Arthur Wills assistant at Ely I can vouch for the intensity of the cold during the depths of winter. The Gurney stoves (or Victorias, being squat, black and with a little crown on top!) were worse than useless - the coke fumes frequently filled the building with acrid smells and smoke. In those days I drove a 1949 MG TD, and I wore more layers to play the organ than to drive the car! Not for nothing was a pathway around the east end of the Cathedral known as 'pneumonia alley'!
            RJ

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            • Op. XXXIX
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 189

              #51
              Originally posted by Roger Judd View Post
              à propos the side theme of coldness in church, having been Arthur Wills assistant at Ely I can vouch for the intensity of the cold during the depths of winter. The Gurney stoves (or Victorias, being squat, black and with a little crown on top!) were worse than useless - the coke fumes frequently filled the building with acrid smells and smoke. In those days I drove a 1949 MG TD, and I wore more layers to play the organ than to drive the car! Not for nothing was a pathway around the east end of the Cathedral known as 'pneumonia alley'!
              RJ
              Very interesting, Roger. Would love to hear more about your experiences with Arthur Wills. I have only visited Ely during warmer months (terrific Moore Second Service I recall), but weren't those Gurney stoves not converted to gas until about 1987? Also, the City of Ely seems to have been lit by gas lights until the 1960's.

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              • DracoM
                Host
                • Mar 2007
                • 12921

                #52
                Ely has [a] one of the most gorgeous acoustics to sing in - the Lady Chapel. BUT [b] it is also the coldest place I have ever rehearsed and sung in.

                Ely in a merciless, grey February reminds you of exactly how endemic hypothermia must have subverted Hereward the Wake's bid for glory.

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                • Roger Judd
                  Full Member
                  • Apr 2012
                  • 232

                  #53
                  Yes, the acoustics of the Lady Chapel are truly wonderful. When I worked there we sang services in the Lady Chapel only once or twice, which was a great sadness. A totally different approach was required from singing in the main body of the Cathedral if any sense of the music was to be achieved. The main building's acoustic was also interesting because, although a huge space, music never got muddied up - clarity was preserved right to the west door - perhaps the Nave's wooden ceiling helped with that.

                  Incidentally, John Rutter's very earliest carol discs were recorded in the Lady Chapel - though hopefully not in the winter!
                  RJ

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                  • bach736
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 213

                    #54
                    You'd be much more comfortable in the Ely Lady Chapel today, RJ - it has underfloor central heating.
                    Evensong is sung in there quite often as is Compline in Advent and Lent.

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                    • DracoM
                      Host
                      • Mar 2007
                      • 12921

                      #55
                      Sounds like a win-win for any choir and their congregation!

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                      • mopsus
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 797

                        #56
                        Having just sung at Ely with a visiting choir, I should add that the October half-term is not the best time to visit, as we were told that the heating is not turned on in the main body of the Cathedral until Remembrance Sunday. (I don't know when it goes off again!)

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                        • DracoM
                          Host
                          • Mar 2007
                          • 12921

                          #57
                          Remembrance Sunday afternoon at about 5.30 if my memory of singing there in an early Dec CE is anything to go by.

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                          • MrGongGong
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 18357

                            #58
                            Originally posted by DracoM View Post
                            Ely has [a] one of the most gorgeous acoustics to sing in - the Lady Chapel.
                            If you must sing in a stable

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                            • Finzi4ever
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 580

                              #59
                              Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
                              If you must sing in a stable
                              How appropriate for December, but I assume you're referring to Cromwell.

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