authentic and original, this is a collection of historical curios covering anything and everything connected with cathedral choirs over the centuries
Wednesday, 19 January 2022
Tuesday, 30 November 2021
Saturday, 20 November 2021
Chorister Voice Trials at Lichfield Cathedral - December 1984
The following information was sent to potential choristers who would have their voice trial in December 1984; scans of the original documents are under the transcribed text.
VOICE TRIAL FOR THE ELECTION OF CHORISTERS
The following information applies to the December 1984 Voice Trial.
- A Voice Trial for boys wishing to enter the Choir of Lichfield Cathedral will next be held on Saturday, 1st December 1984.
- There are 18 Chorister places in the Choir, a small number of which, usually three or four, become vacant each year. Choristers are required to be full boarder pupils at the Cathedral School, the prospectus of which should be read with this notice. They each receive a Dean and Chapter Choral Scholarship which covers two-thirds of the School fees. Successful candidates, who will enter the School in September 1985 will be required to serve a period as Probationers: this will normally be of three terms' duration, each place carrying with it a Scholarship of half the current fees. Probationers can be full or weekly boarders or day pupils.
- (a) Choristers must attend the daily practices, all sung services on Sunday mornings, and Evensong daily except for one weekday, usually Wednesday. They are also required to practise and sing services daily in the period from the end of the School's Christmas term until 26th December, during Holy Week and Easter, and during the weekends before and after other terms. They have about three weeks' holiday after Christmas and in April, and nearly eight weeks in the summer plus half term breaks. Al-though the leave of boarder Choristers is of necessity restricted, they are granted leave on most Saturday afternoons and on Sundays when not required for practice or services.
(b) Probationers keep ordinary School terms, attending Choir practices and at least one service during the week but will not normally be required for Saturday Evensong and the Sunday services, nor for the Christmas and Easter festivals. - Candidates for the Voice Trial should normally be between 7 and 9 1/2 years of age on the day of the Trial. They will be required to sing a hymn or song of their own choice, to sing scales, to repeat notes heard in quick succession on the piano, to differentiate between two, three or four notes played simultaneously on the piano, to memorise short melodic and rhythmic phrases played on the piano, and they may be asked to sing a simple melody at sight. They also have to take a test in verbal reasoning and to show that they are able to read English fluently.
- Previous knowledge of a musical instrument is not necessary, but boys are encouraged to start the piano on arrival at the School, and to take up a second instrument in due course. Should a candidate be able to play an instrument already, he should come prepared to play a short piece at his Voice Trial.
- Depending on the number of candidates it may be necessary to hold Voice Trials in small groups during the morning and then to draw up a short list. Boys who are placed on the short list will be given individual auditions during the course of the afternoon and at that time will be asked to play their musical instruments if they have come prepared to do so.
- Choristers are expected to remain in the Choir and at the School until their fourteenth year when they will have the opportunity of winning valuable Scholarships to Public Schools. All Probationers will fill Chorister places after three terms in normal circumstances, although this will be subject to their progress as Probationers.
- Full details of arrangements for the day of the Voice Trial will be sent to applicants about a week beforehand. All candidates and adults accompanying them must be prepared to be in Lichfield by 9.30 a.m. but a timetable of appointments will be included with the details and the distance families have to travel will be taken into consideration.
- Parents who would like to enter their son for the Voice Trial should complete the enclosed form and return it to the Head Master as soon as possible. The closing date for the receipt of applications is 22nd November, 1984.
- Parents entering their child for the Voice Trial are strongly advised to visit the School with their son before the date of the Trial so that they will have an opportunity to meet and talk with the Head Master and also to see round the School in detail. A tour of the School will be conducted by a senior pupil on the day of the Trial for those parents who have not visited previously and the Head Master will be available. How-ever, the amount of time for discussing matters on an individual basis is bound to be limited on such a busy day. An appointment for a visit can be made by telephoning the Head Master's Secretary at the number given below.
- A registration fee of £40 is payable when a place in the School is accepted and is returned after settlement of the final account when the pupil leaves the School.
The Palace,
LICHFIELD,
Staffordshire.
WS13 7LJ.
Tel: Lichfield (05432) 23326
Monday, 4 October 2021
Thursday, 30 September 2021
Telephoning the Church Service - The Bury and Norwich Post, 30 September 1890
Our attention was drawn to this some months ago, and the clip was reproduced on our social media amidst all the links to online Christmas services. However, the news item is transcribed in full, and reproduced here 131 years after its initial publication on page 8 of the 30 September 1890 edition of 'The Bury and Norwich Post' (a scanned image of the original can be viewed online).
Telephoning the Church Service
The Birmingham Daily Mail announces that the Rev Canon Wilcox, of Christ Church, New Street, has consented to allow the telephone to be introduced into his church, so that certain persons may hear what takes place at the service without personal attendance.
This novel application of the telephone came into use for the first time last Sunday, when the harvest festival commemoration was held at the church, and the listeners at the instrument were able to hear, besides the sermon and the ordinary service, tenor and alto soli by two of the vicars choral of Lichfield Cathedral.
At the end of the choir stalls, on the top of the lectern and the reading desk of the pulpit, were placed small metallic-cased transmitters, arranged that no member of the congregation, unless familiar with the fact, would be led to suspect their real nature. They were so regulated that sound was gathered in without requiring the voice to be directed in close contiguity upon the plate of the transmitter.
This was not the first occasion upon which the telephone has been net up in a place of worship. At Bradford (Yorkshire) it is in use in several places worship other than the Church. It has also been recently introduced at the parish church of Chesterfield, and at all these places subscribers have more or less extensively availed themselves of its use, and it has been found possible for forty or fifty persons to hear a sermon simultaneously.
In one of those churches the pulpit transmitter was placed underneath a cushion covering the stone top, a circular piece being cut out of the cushion for the purpose. One time a strange preacher, not knowing of its existence put his watch in the circular aperture, thinking it to be a receptacle designed for such use. The next day persons who had listened to him through the telephone said they had heard him very well, but they thought he must have been wearing a very loud “ticker,” as it made quite as much sound as he did.
Wednesday, 1 September 2021
Wednesday, 4 August 2021
Richard Lloyd (1933-2021): A personal recollection
originally published in 'Beyond the Quire' (August 2021), the newsletter of the Lichfield Cathedral Former Choristers Association by Wealands Bell, former Precentor of Lichfield Cathedral.
Of the many smiling faces I saw on the September Saturday in 2007 when I was installed as Precentor of Lichfield, none gave me more joy than that of Richard Lloyd, attending the Cathedral that day for the usual Evensong for former choristers. This happy meeting renewed a fruitful association with our best-known musical alumnus, leading to the commissioning of new music, and some convivial occasions in 23 The Close, notably his 80th birthday celebration in 2013.
I was a ten-year-old Durham Chorister when Richard arrived as Organist in 1974. With his predecessor in post almost as long as Richard had been alive, he was a much-needed new broom, inspiring each of us to play our part in raising the choir’s profile in a new era. He composed prolifically for us, multiplying his spidery manuscript through the glamorous innovation of the photocopier. His Advent Drop down ye heavens was among my favourites, while his inexhaustible tide of descants was always exhilarating. His rehearsals were enjoyable, punctuated with niche questions on the Prayer Book, music, cricket: correct answers earned sweets or coins, hurled at whichever boy answered successfully.
Yet life was not all fun and English cadences: Richard demanded perfection of himself, and commitment from everyone. Fortunately, standards quickly rose, and we were soon back on Choral Evensong.
Richard’s wife Morwenna and their daughters played a central part in this happy experience, their hospitality offering us respite from the challenging, still-Edwardian regime at school.
Fifty years on, former choristers and colleagues still share ferociously fond memories of Richard, who is honoured and loved more as a friend and father than just as the teacher and musician he quintessentially was. May he rest in peace and rise to loud organs with Christ, Blessed Mary, St Cuthbert and St Chad.