What a find! In an old MS book from 30 odd years ago, I've found a list of the top 10 pieces that we voted for as trebles! More on this perhaps on another day, but I noticed that Zadok was on our list: 6th, in fact.
I was only thinking a while ago of the sort of buzz that happened when we knew it was coming up. Not sure how most other places did it, but we didn't have a published termly music list - we trebles found out what we were due to sing when the copies appeared on our music desks. Usually, they were for the week ahead, maybe a couple of weeks if something tricky/big/extra was due. New pieces appeared well in hand, too, obviously - though I remember us once having to learn some weird handwritten thing in very short order - interesting to sing, it was, too.
Anyway, I can't recall on what day of the week the next batch used to turn up - possibly Monday morning - it doesn't matter, anyway. What I do recall was the rush to look through all the pieces, accompanied by either gleeful shouts or groans, depending on what we saw. The boss used to watch, amused... we did a regular Mattins so we knew a lot of Te Deums, some of which IIRC we weren't over-impressed with.
The biggest cheer, of course, went up for Insane and Vain - we all absolutely delighted in it and would have sung it every month. But Zadok also generated a buzz. I wonder, now, why. It's a great sing, to be sure, and a famous piece, but it's hardly a treble showpiece is it? Nor is it difficult. Yet ClassicFm started their broadcasts with it, and I have to confess that everytime it comes along on the radio, I will if possible stop what I'm doing and listen avidly. The impact, for me at least, is still there. It must have a certain something that is timeless and maybe indefinable.
Anybody else any thoughts to share about it?
:::::::::::
By the way, in case anybody doesn't know it, here is SJC doing an excellent job with Insane a few years ago..
I was only thinking a while ago of the sort of buzz that happened when we knew it was coming up. Not sure how most other places did it, but we didn't have a published termly music list - we trebles found out what we were due to sing when the copies appeared on our music desks. Usually, they were for the week ahead, maybe a couple of weeks if something tricky/big/extra was due. New pieces appeared well in hand, too, obviously - though I remember us once having to learn some weird handwritten thing in very short order - interesting to sing, it was, too.
Anyway, I can't recall on what day of the week the next batch used to turn up - possibly Monday morning - it doesn't matter, anyway. What I do recall was the rush to look through all the pieces, accompanied by either gleeful shouts or groans, depending on what we saw. The boss used to watch, amused... we did a regular Mattins so we knew a lot of Te Deums, some of which IIRC we weren't over-impressed with.
The biggest cheer, of course, went up for Insane and Vain - we all absolutely delighted in it and would have sung it every month. But Zadok also generated a buzz. I wonder, now, why. It's a great sing, to be sure, and a famous piece, but it's hardly a treble showpiece is it? Nor is it difficult. Yet ClassicFm started their broadcasts with it, and I have to confess that everytime it comes along on the radio, I will if possible stop what I'm doing and listen avidly. The impact, for me at least, is still there. It must have a certain something that is timeless and maybe indefinable.
Anybody else any thoughts to share about it?
:::::::::::
By the way, in case anybody doesn't know it, here is SJC doing an excellent job with Insane a few years ago..
Comment