Rehearsals
Let It Snow!
by berberis on Dec.13, 2014, under Choir, Concerts, LCS, Rehearsals
Saturday, 13th December 2014, Great Hall, Goldsmiths College.
Carols for choir and audience: It came upon a midnight clear / Gloria in excelcis Deo / Stille Nacht / Benedictus from Christmas Oratorio / Sing Joyfully / Susanne un jour / O come, all ye faithful / Deck the hall / In dulci jubilo / A great and mighty wonder / In the bleak mid-winter / Christmas Night / Good King Wenceslas / What cheer? / Nativity carol / Joy to the world! / Snow / Coventry Carol / I wonder as I wander / Hark! The herald-angels sing
Piano: Joshua Kelly
Piano/Organ: Nico de Villiers
Conductor: Dan Ludford-Thomas
Ah, another LCS Christmas Concert! Another chance to ignore the jolliness of the season and be miffed that the sopranos get all the decent tunes and, hence, the glory. That said, I like It came upon a midnight clear, as the altos get a nice line in the last verse, and Rutter’s Nativity Carol is beautiful.
Fartlek, Italian style.
by berberis on Mar.29, 2014, under Choir, Concerts, LCS, Rehearsals
Saturday, 29th March 2014, Fairfield Halls, Croydon.
2331 days since I first sang this with Lewisham Choral Society – 265 since I sang it with the Really Big Chorus at the Royal Albert Hall, and 168 before I hope to be singing it with Crouch End Festival Chorus – I found myself on stage at the Fairfield Halls in Croydon singing Verdi’s Requiem.
Croydon’s a bit of a dump, and the venue is far too big for a choral society, even one augmented by sixty or so singers from Derbyshire. When we filed on for the performance, I was a bit worried that we’d outnumber the audience but it was a fair turnout in the end, and enthusiastic. I was expecting Pete to turn up, and kept an eye out for him until the last minute, but he didn’t show. (Turned out he had ‘flu. He was also being bitten by children. I’m fairly sure that this is not a vaccination method NICE recommend…)
You would be right in thinking that I like singing this work. It’s either that or I’m a masochist. That last part’s true – I once ran a half marathon – and, in its way, Verdi’s Requiem is quite similar. However, it’s less a marathon than a series of sprints: a choral ‘fartlek’, if you will. The opening ‘Requiem/Kyrie Eleison’ is – literally – a vocal warm-up at 80-88bpm, but Verdi clearly knew nothing about workouts because the ‘Dies Irae’ that follows doubles the pace to 160bpm until Fig. 9, when it drops back to 80bpm until Fig. 16. Admittedly, this drop in pace is not accompanied by a drop in intensity; the 14 bars of actual singing are at a volume and pitch it would be difficult to sustain for many more.
Back to 88bpm at Fig. 18, and a chance to breathe between ‘Di-es i-rae’s until Fig. 21, when you can sense that the mezzo-sop is building up to something. This happens seven bars after Fig. 21, and we jog along with the orchestra until Fig. 22, when the bpm goes back up to 160 until the low intensity of the last 5 bars when we are allowed to sit down.
The soloists then waltz along at 6/8 time (one dotted crochet = 100). There’s probably a website that would allow me to convert this to bpm but I can’t be bothered to look right now. At Fig. 27, the basses thunder in at ff with ‘Rex tremendae’ at a very stately 72bpm into the ‘Salva me’ which may be slow but is very intense… a bit like Callanetics, if I remember rightly. At 3 before Fig. 32 we sit down again, standing at 8 before Fig. 47 with no chance to warm up for the run that is the second ‘Dies Irae’.
At Fig. 50, things slow down to the speed of a tectonic plate: the 60bpm ‘Lacrymosa’, all grace notes and heartache. At 3 before Fig. 53, the altos come in on a B with the phrase ‘parce Deus’ (spare [me], Lord). At this point in the concert, I lost my voice. Not through over-use, thankfully, but it was a choice between singing or a coughing fit. Luckily, the end of part one was only 8 pages away, and I managed a couple of ‘Requiem’s before the end.
We start the second half seated, leaping to our feet with no warm up for the 138bpm ‘Sanctus’. This ends with the sopranos on a top F. Immediately after this, ‘the Agnus Dei’ calms things down to 84bpm, and this should be a slow and peaceful walk. The solo soprano should float in on a top E, with the mezzo an 8ve down. The second they started singing, Dan’s head turned towards them. They were flat, and not by a smidgen but by almost a whole tone. Had I not heard it with my own ears, I’d have said it was impossible, but there it was.
The ‘Lux aeterna’ that follows is a mezzo/tenor/bass effort, and it was at this point that I decided that I knew which soloist had probably been to blame for the earlier tuning issue. The soprano gets all agitated at the start of the ‘Libera Me’ and even though the choir tries to stay calm we end up following suit with another rendition of ‘Dies Irae’. This is followed by the 80bpm ‘Requiem’. But the Verdi Workout isn’t finished. No sooner do our heart rates slow than the soloist is off again and, this time, we have to keep up because at Fig. 100 the pace jumps to a ridiculous 232bpm, where it stays until the Fig. 114, at which point – if you’re not careful – you can fall of the treadmill.
You need supreme breath control for the last page. Thanks to the previous 24 pages, you probably don’t have it. A proper vocal workout.
8th April update: It turns out that both soloists were responsible for the tuning issue. No-one seemed to notice and Dan wasn’t bothered – “live performance”. So I felt like an idiot for mentioning it at the rehearsal today, where I spent two hours going “Me sir! Pick me! Pick me!”
C20th Choral Masterpieces
by berberis on Nov.16, 2013, under Choir, Concerts, LCS, Rehearsals
Saturday, 16th November 2013, Great Hall, Goldsmiths College.
Ralph Vaughan Williams: O, Clap your hands!
Percy Whitlock: Plymouth Suite
John Rutter: Gloria
Joseph Jongen: Mass Op. 130Onyx Brass
Organ: James Orford, Nico de Villiers
Conductor: Dan Ludford-Thomas
O, Clap your hands is actually written by the same person who composed The Lark Ascending. Rutter’s Gloria has brass accompaniment and percussion. The Jongen Mass is, apparently, rarely performed and less often recorded.
James Orford and Nico de Villiers were the highlights. Nico is always brilliant, and James is far too young to be as good as he is.
Awake the Psaltery and Harp!
by berberis on Jul.06, 2013, under Choir, Concerts, LCS, Rehearsals
Saturday, 6th July 2013, Cadogan Hall, London.
Leoš Janácek: Otce Náš
John Carmichael: Hommages
Eric Whitacre: Cloudburst
Eric Whitacre: When David Heard
Leonard Bernstein: Chichester PsalmsTenor: Paul Austin Kelly
Countertenor: Roderick Morris
Harp: Alison Martin
Piano/Organ: Nico de Villiers
Percussion Leader: Matthew TurnerConductor: Dan Ludford-Thomas
This was not my introduction to Eric Whitacre – that was Lux arumque back in 2008 – but it was my first hearing of the transcendent When David Heard. Go and listen.
I’ve listened to the Janácek piece a couple of times since this concert and still don’t like it. I can only put this down to having learned the Lord’s Prayer by rote as a child and, to my ears, anything other than a spoken version just sounds wrong. I would have preferred to sing it in Czech, but I suspect that was deemed too difficult. It’s not, but it wasn’t my decision.
An homage is an odd thing. If you don’t know the original piece, then all you see is other people nodding and making ‘oh, that’s so clever!’ faces. If you don’t, then just close your eyes and listen to the music. You’ll either like it or you won’t, but at least you don’t have to look at people being smug.
Cloudburst does exactly what it says on the tin, but it’s the sort of weather we rarely get in the UK. The rain is warm, and you inhale that smell from hot pavements, and the world afterwards seems lighter and fresher. I was even okay with the thigh-slapping and finger-clicking.
Chichester Psalms are lush and lovely, especially the final psalm. It’s film music, and in a good way. In my Boosey & Hawkes score, two bars before fig. 60, under where the C flat becomes a B natural, I wrote ‘it’s the same note, doofus’. Which it is. Only it isn’t. The sopranos (sorry, Maestro Bernstein) go from A flat to G natural at the same time, and this is also the same note. Only it also isn’t. It’s all in the accompaniment. Beautiful stuff.
And then there’s When David Heard. If only to do justice to three bars – 17, 18, and 19 – this needs a vaulted ceiling high enough to allow it to take flight, to rise, to soar, to ring around carved stone, to rattle stained glass windows. From the first chill of bereavement, to the anguish that – literally – stops you in your tracks with tears coursing down your face, to the unreasonable and incoherent rage that surges though you, to the intense sorrow that settles and, with time, becomes a shadow, When David Heard is months – sometimes years – of angst distilled into a few minutes of astonishing beauty.
“Above all, trust the silences.”
L&G NHS Trust Spring Concert 2013
by berberis on Apr.20, 2013, under Choir, Concerts, L&G NHS Choir, Rehearsals
Saturday, 20th April 2013, St Mary’s Church, Lewisham.
Praise the Lord: Traditional, arr. K Burton
Even Such Is Time: Poem – Sir Walter Raleigh, Music – Bob Chilcott
Total Praise: Music – Richard Smallwood, arr. Dan Ludford-Thomas
For Once In My Life: Miller & Murden, arr. Jon Cohen
Lean On Me: Bill Withers, arr. Jon Cohen
And So It Goes: Words and music – Billy Joel, arr. Bob Chilcott
Accentuate the Positive: Arlen & Miller, arr. Jon Cohen
The Turtle Dove: Traditional, arr. Vaughan Williams
How Can I Keep From Singing?: Music R Wadsworth Lowry, arr. Jon Cohen
She Moved Through The Fair: Traditional, arr. Peter Hunt
Bridge Over Troubled Water/Fix You: Simon & Garfunkel/Coldplay, arr. Peter Mitchell
Like A Mighty Stream: Jacobson & Hogan
Come and Go With Me: Traditional, arr. K BurtonThe Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Trust Choir
Sopranos: Suzanne Benett, Zoe Davies, Caroline Duffy, Sheena Joseph, Joan Mills, Elem Nnachi, Katie Rogerson, Christine Scarsbrook, Elizabeth Steele
Altos: Antonia Boyce, Caroline Harbord, Petrina Pottinger, Claire Roberts, Caroline Smith, Nora Smith, Sarah Wood
Tenors: Edmund Chaloner, Chidi Ejimofo, Derrick Kiteke, Errol Woodburn
Basses: Simon Fitzgerald, Malcolm Hancock, Aaron Hoyte, Emmet MastersonThe Liam Dunachie Trio
Piano: Liam Dunachie
Double Bass: Andy Robb
Drums: Dave StoreyMusical Director: Peter Mitchell
Artistic Director: Dan Ludford-Thomas
As I’m writing this nearly five years after the actual event, it’s fair to say that I don’t remember much about this concert. However, what I can say – without fear of contradiction – is that the Liam Dunachie Trio would have been amazing, Dan would have been full of energy and inspiration, and someone/several people, at some point, would have forgotten the words +/- the tune of one or more of the songs.
I don’t recall Praise the Lord, The Turtle Dove, or Like A Mighty Stream, probably because we don’t perfom them anymore. I do recall For Once In My Life, but we don’t perform that anymore, either. Come & Go With Me would have involved several key changes at the end (although not as many as I expect), and at least a dozen of the people at this gig have now moved on – including Dan and Pete.