Don't forget this broadcast today:
Easter from King's.
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by mercia View Postwill be watching, but is it actually a repeat from a previous year ? my online TV guide has 2011 against it
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01rrgg2"...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..."
Comment
-
-
Curalach
-
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostWatching now. Why they had to put on the Mozart Ave Verum and not Brd's?
S Cleobury Esq
King's College
Cambridge CB2 1ST"...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..."
Comment
-
-
Anna
We've all watched. and enjoyed Kings I think. But, how many treat it as just a performance, a concert, and how many treat it as a religious experience, a church service which they are unable to attend? (the same applies to CE - the performance or the content?)
Serious question, not inviting any Anti-Christian stuff, just genuinely interested, as in, if you could go to church and hear this - would you?
Comment
-
Well, if you are hankering after something BBC/King's don't do any longer, then try to listen via their website to St Thomas Fifth Avenue NYC and you will hear proper, full services and amazing singing from one of the, if not the best men and boys choirs singing anywhere these days - sound only, but they webcast every single service in their week, no editing, no packaging, no plugging into what the BBC think of as the standard religious spectacular of any season, namely King's at Christmas, Easter, or whenever, with that formulaic visual packaging that IME is both tiring and predictable and detracts from the music and the work of the choir.
For example, go the St T website now and listen to their Holy Week services, particularly Maundy Thursday. Slow, quiet, less is more.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Anna View PostWe've all watched. and enjoyed Kings I think. But, how many treat it as just a performance, a concert, and how many treat it as a religious experience, a church service which they are unable to attend? (the same applies to CE - the performance or the content?)
Serious question, not inviting any Anti-Christian stuff, just genuinely interested, as in, if you could go to church and hear this - would you?
I would go to a church (and have done so )to listen religious or church music just as I would go to a concert hall.
There is music that makes me question my non belief (Mozart's Great C Minor Mass for example springs immediately to mind).
Comment
-
-
Hautboiste
No I wouldn't. The majority of the readers didn't convince me - they just, as my Aged Father told me NOT to do when I was 8 and practising to read from the pulpit for the first time, said the words.
The singing was all right but I've never been impressed with Stephen Cleobury's leadership of the choir. There was very little feeling in the singing - they just sang the words. I didn't get the Easter feeling at all.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Curalach View PostI'm going there tomorrow for the Easter morning service for the first time in my life.
Either way, I hope it is a great experience... but if the former, when you enter, don't let yourself be hurried... just raise your eyes to the ceiling and absorb the astonishing marvel that is that roof...
... that branching roof
Self-poised, and scooped into ten thousand cells
Where light and shade repose, where music dwells
Lingering - and wandering on as loath to die;
Like thoughts whose very sweetness yieldeth proof
That they were born for immortality
as Wordsworth said.*
I was there on Monday evening, and spent a lot of the time gazing upwards. (I must have listened to music in there 100 times).
*http://www.bartleby.com/106/279.html"...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..."
Comment
-
-
Re the spirituality bit, I agree with some of the sentiments above but I did find the John Updike reading unexpected and quite challenging. The somewhat limited congregation made it feel more like a performance to camera than a service of devotion.
Re the music, it was all "performed" to the usual standard (perhaps a little heavy in the Weelkes?).
BUT - why oh why is it Easter from Kings? I can sort of understand that Carols from Kings is a National Institution now but why Kings again at Easter? There are dozens of Cathedrals and Collegiates that could do the job. Come on BBC - once a year is enough, even from the almighty Kings.
Comment
-
Comment