Tuesday, 11 February 2025

Singing in a concert

The book Walking with Gosse [1] opens with the following description: “After the summer holiday season, Paignton in the 1950s was typical of many seaside towns in the UK, being quiet and left to its residents. A small theatre put on rather good amateur pantomimes at Christmas and, at other times, hosted school music festivals, elocution contests, and the occasional Billy Graham-style Christian Crusade”. This theatre is shown below.

I was a participant in school music festivals in Paignton, always as part of a choir, and we had an interest in how we performed, as pride was at stake. We also wanted to sing as well as we could. There were set pieces and the choir practised these, so that we not only knew the words and music, but all the little nuances of expression that the music teacher wanted. On the day of the performance, we were all kitted up in school uniform and then called to the stage to do our bit. When all schools had finished, an Adjudicator described how we had all performed and then gave each choir a mark. I was fortunate in being part of a choir that always did well.

All this was in the late 1950s and early 1960s, but I was reminded of it all last evening when I attended the “Young Voices 2025” concert at Wembley Arena. My granddaughter, India, was one of the 4609 children taking part and they put on a great concert, with live music from a band, guest singers and rappers, and dancers. It all lasted nearly two hours and the children were as enthusiastic at the end (a medley of Bob Marley songs) as they had been at the beginning. It must have made a big impression on them and was all so different to the rather turgid music festivals that I enjoyed. Then, Paignton is a long way from London, but so is Norwich, where India is at school. She must have been so thrilled to be taking part in such a lively, high-quality event.

[1] Roger S Wotton (2020) Walking with Gosse. e-book






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