Originally posted by ardcarp
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Choral Vespers from Westminster Cathedral 7th Nov 2012
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostCrikey!! Work that out for the average size cathedral choir + organists + extras. Close on £1500, maybe?
I do wonder who it's aimed at. It seems to me that most of the pieces in are beyond the abilities of the non-cathedral or professional choir.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Simon
I suspect it isn't actually aimed at anyone. I suspect it's rather more a self-glorying thing dreamed up by the musical establishment, using the excuse of the Jubilee to manufacture a royal connection.
I expect that few people will buy it, except out of an academic interest, and I doubt that most cathedrals/foundations who have them would have bothered had they not been funded. We'll probably hear groups like the BBC singers performing the odd piece from time to time, for various reasons.
I have seen a copy and it's well printed and rather classily done, IMO, but I bet that less than a dozen of the pieces will ever enter the repertoire as well-loved favourites - though it's true that a few deserve to. Ms Burrell's gut-wrenching attempt will most certainly not, despite the touching support from some quarters...
Still, we'll wait and see if I'm right. Back here in 5 years, chaps, to see how many of each have been performed since? Put the date in your diaries!
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Simon
Thank you, GJ.
You're up late this evening! Composing, I hope. More power to your elbow. The more there is of your work out there, maybe the less we'll get of the noisome pestilences.
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Merton College Oxford is also preparing a choirbook of new church music, linked to the College's 750th anniversary in 2014. I think the settings of the 'O Antiphons' by seven different composers on their new Advent CD, which are a Merton commission, may be part of it. I haven't listened to my copy of the CD yet so can't comment on their difficulty, or that of other pieces in the choirbook, but I see that Gabriel Jackson is the composer of 'O Clavis David' so perhaps he could.
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostMerton College Oxford is also preparing a choirbook of new church music, linked to the College's 750th anniversary in 2014. I think the settings of the 'O Antiphons' by seven different composers on their new Advent CD, which are a Merton commission, may be part of it. I haven't listened to my copy of the CD yet so can't comment on their difficulty, or that of other pieces in the choirbook, but I see that Gabriel Jackson is the composer of 'O Clavis David' so perhaps he could.
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The Burrell piece challenged the trebles a bit, perhaps.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIn fact the choir was slightly less secure in the Howells 'Salve'...good treble solo BTW...and I wonder if that was due to a last-minute inclusion?
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Wolsey. I apologise if any offence is caused, but I may as well admit to not being much of a royalist nor to being unduly bothered about the finer points of addressing their excellencies. There! I've got it wrong again! (I'm just waiting for someone to ask if I'd prefer a President Blair/Cameron/Clegg. Go on......)
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWolsey. I apologise if any offence is caused, but I may as well admit to not being much of a royalist nor to being unduly bothered about the finer points of addressing their excellencies. There! I've got it wrong again! (I'm just waiting for someone to ask if I'd prefer a President Blair/Cameron/Clegg. Go on......)
I fancy that you have a friend or neighbour - a lady barrister perhaps - who is aching to replicate in UK the career of Mary Robinson. Please do tell us more about her qualifications.
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Originally posted by Wolsey View PostPlease do not address the Queen as 'HRH'. That is an error best confined to ill-informed BBC presenters.My boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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