Perhaps there's simply a sensitivity to the recent tragic news from Conneticut.
A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols Dec 25th 2012 2 p.m.
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EnzoElgar
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Rupert P Matley
However, I wasn't impressed by the organ scholar's rendition of the BWV 729 In Dulci Jubilo. Too fast for that acoustic and over ornamented for my liking.
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Contre Bombarde
I conversely was very impressed with BWV 729; the acoustic was deadened to some extent by all the well wrapped bodies and for me the ornamentation was a welcome addition to a piece often played with formulaic dullness. The Duruflé was a superbly mature performance of a none too easy part of the repertoire. I did just hear the start of some applause before the fade-out...
Compliments of the season to all; a well-earned (well, I think so) break in Paris from tomorrow.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostJust as a matter of interest, as I listen to the Christmas Eve R4 broadcast not having time on Christmas Day, what's the difference between R4 and R3? Also, does the music ever change (apart from arrangers), from memory it's the same year to year (which is lovely, not complaining!)
Until about 2006 Radio 4 Optimod on FM was switched out for this ONE broadcast every year (in about 2003 they forgot and it had to be switched out at about 3.30 pm). However, since then it's been on - sadly.
Having said all that, I haven't heard much of this year's Radio 4 version - it's sitting on a DAT which I shall get round to listening to eventually. So maybe this year it won't have been so bad....?
(The effects of Optimod can be mitigated if the programme is sent out from the OB at a deliberately reduced level; I've no idea if the engineers at King's would dare to that though. (This technique was used in about 1989 to counter the effects of Optimod on a Clapton concert from the RAH on Radio 1 - and as a result it sounded superb on FM. Sadly a number of angry memos subsequently were fired off and I doubt anyone in today's BBC has the guts to try it again!)Last edited by mw963; 26-12-12, 12:32.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThere's a (probably apocryphal) story of the new choral scholar who was a bit up himself. The other men informed him that the shout was so loud, no-one could actually hear the word 'Noel' and it was a tradition in the choir to shout whatever word they liked. They agreed privately amongst themselves not to shout anything at all and bribed the choirboys into silence too. So the piece ended with a loud pedal note and the hapless fellow shouting 'B******S at the top of his voice."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostI only take issue with the First Lesson, which for me is too long, too repetitive, linguistically dated and is a trial for a young chorister to get through.
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Originally posted by DracoM View Posthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rr6yZ-deibU
Here is the 1954 Ord / KCC Nine Lessons in b/w they talked about. Worth it for the diction / voice production of that opening treb solo.
We watched this over Christmas - I have this DVD http://www.base.com/buy/product/caro...gc-oa0822d.htm which as well as carols from 2000 has the discussion between the DoMs (mentioned above) plus the 1954 archive recording. The DVD usually gets dusted off over the festive season."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Here is the 1954 Ord / KCC Nine Lessons in b/w they talked about. Worth it for the diction / voice production of that opening treb solo.
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Mr Stoat
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOh dear. I thought they all came over as...well...cloistered! I have enormous respect for DW in whose era many of us cut our choral teeth; but I think one of my grandchildren might have said, "Get a life". But thanks for the clip anyway, mercia.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWorth it for a lot of things, IMO. A fabulously prepared choir with the minimal conducting gestures common in those days. The phrasing and subtle 'commas' were incredible...no great artificial gaps between lines. Above all, there was a truly devotional 'feel' to the whole thing, including the readings of the (generally shorter) lessons. I'm asking myself do I love this clip because it is of my childhood era? No, I don't think so. No rose-tinted specs. It has something very special. The fact that it was unusual for voices to break before the age of 14 probably helped.
No doubt I shall get torpedoed for even daring to suggest such a thing. More or less every Oxbridge college and London ensemble has woken up to the potential of a choir as a PR tool, such that the value of having recording contracts / tour dates / youtube clips etc is critical. The competition to be heard / snapped up is far greater now than heretofore. That 1954 KCC ethos seems light years away from what we regularly hear on the circuit these days.
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