Category Archives: Concerted effort

Performances and reviews

Make we joy now

The season of Advent has well and truly begun over last weekend. In fine voice, the Chamber Choir rose to the match the occasion on Friday and delivered a performance rich in nuance, flexibility, and with a unity of ensemble that at times made them sound as one voice.

In fine voice: this year's Chamber Choir

All the aspects upon which we’d worked in rehearsals – dynamics, diction, flexibility – came out.

In the rehearsal earlier in the afternoon, we’d practiced the pieces, of course,  but more importantly, we’d rehearsed processing in and out and bowing. As I said to them, the performance starts the moment the group processes into the performing space; you win or lose the trust of the audience in that moment, in the manner in which you take command of the space, the way in which you hold yourself as you walk on. Walk with confidence, and the audience will immediately trust that you are about to deliver a performance equal in confidence. Walk on sloppily, self-consciously or nervously, and you communicate that sense to the audience and lose their trust in you. No matter what happens afterwards, walking into the performance governs their initial reaction and trust in what follows.

We also rehearsed bowing. In focusing so much on the pieces, on performing, It’s easy to overlook what happens after the singing stops. If you deliver a polished programme, it can be tarnished by losing discipline in bowing and leaving the performing area; a good group carries high standards of professionalism right through until it has left the public eye. There was some mirth over whether to mutter ‘Have I cleaned my shoes ? Yes, I’ve cleaned my shoes!’ in lowering and raising one’s head or to use ‘Down, two three – Up, two three!’ instead. Then there was confusion (and much hilarity) over whether, whichever phrase one used, one lowered the head over the length of the phrase (‘Have I cleaned my shoes ?’), or whether one whipped one’s head down straight away on the first word (‘Have’) and then immediately up on the later word (‘Yes’), which could potentially result in whip-lash. With such issues are pre-concert rehearsals concerned…

In the waiting-room outside the church, Steph led the warm-ups and we sang the first antiphon and our trusted Remember, O Thou Man to focus our minds on the opening of the concert. When we filed into the back of the church, preparing to process down the middle, we were greeted by a packed audience; from outside, candle-flames flickered and danced a warm orange halo at the windows, and the atmosphere inside was electric. As the first Advent antiphon rose into the rafters, I was immediately reassured; the sound was confident, the ensemble was secure, and the group was about to deliver a fine performance. As the text of Steve Martland’s carol puts it, ‘Make we joy now in the fest,’ and we certainly did.

Congratulations and thanks to everyone who participated, to the choir, readers, those who manned the ticket-desk, to Janet and Tim for their help with setting the church, to those who ran the post-concert refreshments and the nocturnal parking arrangements, and to Stephen Laird for the invitation to perform. Advent has begun.

Advent Concert: tickets now on sale!

Tickets are now on sale for the Chamber Choir’s ‘Music for Advent‘ concert at the church ot St. Cosmus and St. Damian, Blean, on Friday 25 November.

Chamber ChoirAs I type, the pile of black tickets rests before me, and is a thing of great beauty, with a silken sheen to the deep black of the card.

If you want to lay hands on one of these objets d’art, or simply want to come to the concert, tickets are £6 (£4 concessions) and are available from the University Music Office (01227 827335) or e-mail musictickets@kent.ac.uk, or from the Church Office (01227 763373). Proceeds from the concert are in aid of the Blean Church Restoration Appeal and Blean School Playground Improvements.

A campus ‘Two Choirs’ Festival: in miniature!

If you are around on campus between 5.30 – 6pm later today, you may hear the strains of choral singing emanating from a stage on the Registry Gardens.

Don’t panic: it will be us.

Ahead of their combined concert in two days’ time, both the Chamber and Cecilian Choirs will be performing a few choice morsels, selected from our programme for Friday night.

Assuming the weather is fine – and, as of the time of writing, it’s hard to say, so mercurial is the sky outside my office window – come along for half an hour of choral singing in the (positive spin alert:) bright summer sunshine, including pieces by Tallis, Saint-Saens, the odd madrigal, Finzi and a couple of surprises.

Hopefully there’ll be a few photos of the event which I’ll post here afterwards. Here’s hoping we won’t be singing in the rain…

All Wye on the night: Chamber Choir review

First-year student Matt Bamford reviews on-line last Friday’s Chamber Choir concert over on ‘Music Matters,’ as the choir brought the term’s music-making activities to a triumphant conclusion in a performance at Wye Parish Church.

There was great assurance about their performance: terrific craft, subtlely, wit and elegance – like a fine wine, the Choir has continued to mature this term in the period since the Cathedral Crypt Concert, and they delivered a concert full of confidence, polish and character. The madrigals danced with fitting elegance and poise, the Macmillan blossomed off the page, the Skempton revelled in its sonorous yet subtle colours, and the jazz piece demonstrated the close-harmony singing is another of the group’s strengths, aided by some terrific scat improvisation from Steph Richardson.

Thanks to both the Chamber and Cecilian Choirs for all their hard work and commitment across the course of this term, it has resulted in some fine performing and a terrific demonstration of the quality of music-making at the University. There’s more to come next term: watch this space!

Hail, Bright Cecilians!

Friday’s ‘Grand Tour’ performance by the Cecilian Choir was tremendous, as the group demonstrated a terrific flexibility and control of dynamics in performance. Ranging from the Renaissance polyphony of Palestrina, the colourful harmonies of Duruflé, the Sturm un Drang of Brahms and Bruckner, to the feisty Dowland, the choir showed an assured grasp of the finer nuances of style. The range of dynamics was exhibited to fine effect in the two settings of the ‘Ave Verum’ by Mozart and Saint-Saëns, the intimacy of the Mozart balanced by the power of the Saint-Saëns.

On song: the Cecilian Choir

Aided by stirring performing from the brass quintet, and some insightful readings from Alanya Holder, Ben Roberts-Waite and Imogen Lock (also members of the choir), the concert travelled from England to Rome and back in fine style.

With thanks to the several alumni who returned to sing, and to all the performers for working to make the concert a success. Roll on next term: more details about the summer concert in a few weeks…

We sing both night and day: the Carol Service

Picture, if you will, an ancient cathedral plunged into darkness; the only light comes from the dancing flames of the candles held aloft by the congregation. From out of the silence, and the dark, two voices begin singing the first verse of Once In Royal David’s City. The voices soar into the recessed depths of the vaulted roof; the second verse begins, the same melody now supported with rich harmonies. The Carol Service is underway.

The Chamber Choir rose to the occasion in admirable form, beginning the service with Tavener’s Today the Virgin, delivered with punch and rhythmic vitality – having performed it this time last week at the Advent Concert, it’s become comfortably familiar, and the group delivered it with great confidence, each lengthening ‘Alleluia’ growing and filling the Cathedral with ringing harmony.

On a roll, now, the next solo choir carol, The Holly and the Ivy, virtually sprang from the page, and was by turns vivacious, playful and wonderfully legato in all the right places.

And my piece, A Babe Is Born, had an air of medieval magic, the second sopranos and altos evoking the distant choir of angels abroad on a winter’s night, celebrating Christ’s birth, and the whole choir dancing as one with the feel of the rhythms throughout. We decided, in rehearsal that afternoon, to give the final gesture, a three-note rising phrase on ‘cardine!’ more impetus by half-singing, half-declaiming the phrase – notes were less important than the drive of the phrase in the larger-scale surroundings of the Cathedral – and the final, exultant shout echoed wonderfully round the Nave for a good eight seconds before receding.

Traditionally, the University Carol Service celebrates the multi-culturalism of the University community by having Silent Night in a variety of different languages; this presented something of a linguistic minefield for everyone, with some fairly exotic verses being dealt with admirably, if not necessarily with quite the proper pronunciation!

As the service ended, and the congregation left the Cathedral with their candles re-lit during O Come All Ye Faithful, there was a sense that Christmas really had, finally, begun. The University community had come together in words and music to reflect on the season; and as the sea of dwindling candle-flames receded down the nave and out into the winter night, the spirit of Christmas went with them.

With thanks to the Choir for all their hard work over the course of this term; it’s been a great success: friendships have been forged, great performances have been achieved, meat and mead have been shared, and the group have done themselves proud. They have become a family: looking after and supporting one another, and achieving great things together.

Merry Christmas, everyone.

The Cecilians entertain…

The Cecilian Choir ended their term in fine style with a lunchtime concert of popular carols to entertain the members of the Former Staff Association in Rutherford yesterday.

Cecilian sopranos

The Sopranos: Imogen, Aisha and Alanya

Bedecked variously with tinsel, reindeer antlers and a miniature Santa hat, the Choir performed to the delight of the FSA as part of their Christmas Lunch. A few members of the Choir even struck lucky in the raffle afterwards, with one member of the bass section appropriating a bottle of champage, one of the sopranos being ‘really spoiled’ with a box of Ferrero Rocher, and one winning flowers. No names. You know who you are…

Cecilian sopranos

Guess who won the Ferrero Rocher...

With thanks to Dave Reason for the invitation to return this year, and looking forward to further occasions in the New Year; thanks also to the Choir for all their work this term.

Trolling the ancient Yuletide carol: Chamber Choir at St. Mildred’s

Touch and go, this week, as to whether the concert would even happen. Heavy snow since Monday, icy roads and dodgy travelling conditions meant it wasn’t until ten o’clock on the morning of the concert, with event organisers exchanging phone-calls like Nato Superpowers planning a strategic response, that the green light came on.

Digital communication then came to the fore, with texts, e-mail and Facebook being deployed to tell performers and potential audience-members alike that the concert was still on. Choir and readers travelled gingerly along icy roads to rehearse at the church in the afternoon, before repairing to an hostelry in the centre of Canterbury for dinner; treacherous travelling meant that most people preferred not to have to go back to campus or home betwixt rehearsal and concert.

And what a concert it was. The Chamber Choir rose to the occasion and unleashed a sound quite unlike anything they have ever delivered in rehearsals hitherto; ensemble was tight, intonation excellent, and well-worked diction meant the words were clear. The readers, including staff from the University, an alumnus and members of the choir, provided some thought-provoking reflections on the Advent season, and the church community provided wine and mince pies for the benefit of all afterwards.

And the aspect most commented upon about the concert ? Not the performing (about which the feedback from the audience was highly enthusiastic afterwards), but the attire: how smart and professional everyone looked. New ties for the chaps and scarves for the ladies, matched and co-ordinated, added to the visual presentation of the performance, and was remarked on by nearly everyone with whom I spoke afterwards. It’s the details that count, just as much as the performing; in fact, perfecting the look and visual presentation of the group already establishes a level of professionalism even before a chord has been sung. Look organised, and the audience already believe you will sound thus, before hearing a thing.

Well done to all, who worked to make the concert a success, and thanks to St. Mildred’s for their support and for the opportunity to perform in their historic church. They’ve asked us back again in the future: the bar has now been set pretty high! The ensemble has flexed its muscles in public on three occasions now, and has grown to become a fully-fledged choir, with a rich and exciting sound. And I confess: I’m proud of what we’ve achieved, proud of the choir and the commitment they’ve shown, and of the heights to which they have risen and the standards they’ve reached.

Next up: Canterbury Cathedral, for the University Carol Service. Bring it on!