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Review - Tudors At St George's 24 September 2011
A modest but very appreciative audience came to hear The Tudor Choristers
present a program music from 16th and 17 Century Tudor England on the
afternoon of Sunday 24 September. The music for the first half
represented the Catholic liturgy and opened with William Byrd's Sing Joyfully and followed by Byrd's Mass for 4 voices with Ne irascaris domine after the Gloria and Thomas Tallis' O nata lux de lumine after the Credo.
After interval 3 Madrigals added a secular 'flavour' to the program,and these were followed by Tomkins' When David Heard and Then David Mourned; two quite different versions of Hosanna to the Son of David by Tallis and Gibbons. The concert concluded with Gibbons Nunc Dimittis (from the Short service) and his magnificent motet O Clap your hands together.
Refreshments were served after the performance.
The choir donated its performance to the Church fund for the
restoration of the rear balcony and the sum of $180 was raised in
donations.
St Georges Choir (extended) to perform Allegri Miserere on Good Friday 2011 (22nd April 10am)
A highlight of the Good
Friday devotions will be a performance of Allegri's famous setting of
Psalm 51 (Miserere mei) as well as motets by Ingregneri, Croce, Purcell
and Stainer.
Miserere, full name "Miserere mei, Deus" (Latin: "Have mercy on me, O
God") by Italian composer Gregorio Allegri, is a setting of Psalm 51
(50) composed during the reign of Pope Urban VIII, probably during the
1630s, for use in the Sistine Chapel during matins, as part of the
exclusive Tenebrae service on Wednesday and Friday of Holy Week. The
service would start usually around 3AM, and during the ritual, candles
would be extinguished, one by one, until one remained alight and
hidden. Allegri composed his setting of the Miserere for the final act
within the first lesson of the Tenebrae service.
It was the last of twelve falsobordone Miserere settings composed and
chanted at the service since 1514 and the most popular: at some point,
it became forbidden to transcribe the music and it was allowed to be
performed only at those particular services, adding to the mystery
surrounding it. Writing it down or performing it elsewhere was
punishable by excommunication. The setting that escaped from the
Vatican is actually a conflation of verses set by Gregorio Allegri
around 1638 and Tommaso Bai (also spelled "Baj"; 1650–1718) in 1714.
The Miserere is written for two choirs, one of five and one of four
voices, and is generally accepted to be one of the finest examples of
Renaissance polyphony to survive to the present day[citation needed].
One of the choirs sings a simple version of the original Miserere
chant; the other, spatially separated, sings an ornamented "commentary"
on this. The piece is an example of the stile antico or prima pratica;
however, its constant use of the dominant seventh chord and its
emphasis on polychoral techniques certainly put it out of the range of
prima pratica[citation needed]; a more accurate comparison would be to
the works of Giovanni Gabrieli.
Three authorised copies of the work were distributed prior to 1770 – to
the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I, to the King of Portugal, and to Padre
(Giovanni Battista) Martini. However, none of them succeeded in
capturing the beauty of the Miserere as performed annually in the
Sistine Chapel. According to the popular story (backed up by family
letters), the fourteen-year-old Mozart was visiting Rome, when he first
heard the piece during the Wednesday service. Later that day, he wrote
it down entirely from memory, returning to the Chapel that Friday to
make minor corrections. Some time during his travels, he met the
British historian Dr Charles Burney, who obtained the piece from him
and took it to London, where it was published in 1771. Once the piece
was published, the ban was lifted; Mozart was summoned to Rome by the
Pope, only instead of excommunicating the boy, the Pope showered
praises on him for his feat of musical genius. The work was also
transcribed by Felix Mendelssohn in 1831 and Franz Liszt, and various
other 18th and 19th century sources survive. Since the lifting of the
ban, Allegri's Miserere has become one of the most popular a cappella
choral works now performed.
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29th August 2010 - A Three Choirs Festival
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A Festival of Choirs
The afternoon of 29th of August saw St Georges host, as part of the
final Lost Arts weekend of the Winter in Banyule Festival, a bill of
soaring arrangements performed by three local choirs. As Richard Hoy
astutely observed during duties as MC, you wouldn't have judged choral
singing a 'lost art' by the numbers engaging in the concert that day.
Each choir offered the audience a repertoire so unique and vigorous as
to not only undermine the endangered nature of the art, but also any
impression that it might be stagnating.
Our own in-house choir, the St Georges Choir and Friends (named so by
the talented Roger Brown due to the reinforcement such friends provide
at various times throughout the year) began proceedings with Batten's
rousing Praise the Lord, all ye heathens, canvassing a spectrum that
included traditional Anglican chant, works in Latin by Palestrina,
Croce and Elgar, and Gibbons' almost lulling Almighty and Everlasting
God. I can report that Roger was very pleased with our performance
(much to this reporter's relief!) and it was one that all in the choir
enjoyed immensely, especially in front of such well-packed pews! (In
which, slightly perturbingly, I noticed my Year 8 English teacher,
purple hair streaks still luminous ten years on. But she seemed to
epitomise the audience's reaction to the whole concert - a beaming
appreciation of the afternoon on offer, and an awe at the extremely
high standard evident in the performances generally).

St George's choir at the conclusion of their bracket
The Tudors Choristers, conducted by Andrew Blackburn, then swept aside
any of those aforementioned prejudices with a remarkably polished,
agile performance given all tongues were firmly in cheek for much of
its length! To describe a musical offering as a feast is hardly novel
and definitely cliched, but in this case it is unavoidable given the
overarching themes of food and celebration. They performed music set to
historical texts including Pastyme with good company (Henry VIII),
market haggling (New Oysters!, Thomas Ravencroft), Fragments from his
dish; 5 Songs by Bob Chilcott and others, though Mashed Potato/Love
Song (Sidney Hoddes) was an obvious crowd-pleaser. Who can resist
someone justifying to his or her lover why, in a contest between said
lover and a 'third-helping of mashed potato', the dish would win?!

The Tudor Choristers
Diversifying the choral menu further, the Heidelberg Choral Society,
led by Matthew Toogood, performed two choruses (both the witches'
chorus and lamenting Patria oppressa) from their recent season of
Verdi's Macbeth. They completed the audience's operatic experience with
the same composer's Brindisi (also from Macbeth), soloist Jodie Debono's
arresting voice commanding the entire church.
The combined three choirs singing the Hallelujah Chorus (from Handel's
Messiah) was a wonderfully energetic finale that lingered on all
present even after its conclusion, as did the afternoon generally. The
civility of the whole affair continued with afternoon tea served in the
hall, wherein the post-performance buzz of both those on-stage and off
was palpable. Hopefully this will be the first of many such showcases
at St Georges of the vitality and diversity still evident in the 'lost
art' of choral singing!
Sophie Curzon-Siggers
Mp3 recordings of the items sung by St. George's choir are here
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The choir contribution to Bushfire Relief

A full report of this event and the choir trip to Beechworth is here
October/November 2009 - CD in
preparation
Psalms from St
George's
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