Organ matters - Organs matter!

Organs in danger => Organs in danger => Topic started by: David Pinnegar on January 31, 2017, 07:17:41 PM

Title: Slow death
Post by: David Pinnegar on January 31, 2017, 07:17:41 PM
Is it the Organ as an instrument, Churches in which organs are kept or this forum which is dead?

Slow death is painful.

Best wishes

David P
Title: Re: Slow death
Post by: JBR on January 31, 2017, 10:34:52 PM
Still a glimmer of life here!
Title: Re: Slow death
Post by: dragonser on February 01, 2017, 08:38:25 PM
HI,
this cold weather has given me several colds etc so I haven't been online much at all .....
But with the warmer spring weather arriving sometime I hope to be more active....
hopefully it isn't slow death, just hibernation !
regards Peter B
Title: Re: Slow death
Post by: Martin Renshaw on September 04, 2017, 01:38:59 PM
Slow death, 16th century style ; to be repeated in the 21st century ?

In 1547, all places of education outside the universities (who themselves narrowly escaped confiscation of their lands and therefore income) were closed down and their assets stripped by a failing state, along with hospitals (almshouses) and chantries.  In 1548 the whole Latin repertoire of composed English music disappeared in a holocaust of 250,000 MS and printed books.  The first Prayer Books of 1549 and 1551 completed the process of removing music from churches.  It took less than a hundred years for thousands of organs to disappear from churches.  Then it took 300 more years for levels of provision of education to reach those of the 1530s, meanwhile leaving a cowed and illiterate population subject to the whims and fancies of autocratic rulers of all shades.

In the last years of the 20th century, most churches quite deliberately started to give up any educational role in the community – or indeed any community role at all, becoming for the most part enclosed, hermetic congregations.   Organs were disused, choirs disbanded and the precious chain of choral-musical education that had been fostered before by the church was broken.  Now there are not enough candidates for organ scholarships in university colleges to fill all posts with potentially good players, and the likelihood is that there will soon not be enough choral scholar material either, for the same reasons.

So will the end of this century see the disappearance of serious music from a country (ours) that was once so famous for it ?   Or are we going to make a serious attempt to keep the grass roots going in the face of church closures, ecclesiastical indifference hardening into opposition, and a political climate turning to xenophobia, national introversion (Brexit) and religious strife – just as in the later part of the 1500s ?

The conference will attempt to see a way through, using the knowledge of the mistakes of the past – will you be there to help, or don't you think it's worth a fight ?

Conference booking (free) via soundsmedieval.org home page, please.

Martin



Title: Re: Slow death
Post by: diapason on September 04, 2017, 10:06:28 PM
Sadly, I can't make the conference.  However, you may have seen the link I posted a few days ago to the campaign to save the organ in St Paul's, St Albans.  As a result of this campaign, a few of us are looking at the feasibility of forming a group aimed at the preservation of organs in churches - campaigning for their retention and use - and also the he-homing of organs which are 'redundant'.  It would be a charitable trust and would hope to work with BIOS and other interested parties.  Watch this space.

Also worth following the campaign to fight the decision of the HTB evangelicals to ban classical musicians from the Musician's Church, St Sep's in London.  Close links between the campaigns and also worth noting the current resurgence in Choral Evensong.

Many green shoots amongst the devastation wrought by the happy clappy brigade.
Title: Re: Slow death
Post by: JBR on September 04, 2017, 10:28:32 PM
Quote from: diapason on September 04, 2017, 10:06:28 PM
Sadly, I can't make the conference.  However, you may have seen the link I posted a few days ago to the campaign to save the organ in St Paul's, St Albans.  As a result of this campaign, a few of us are looking at the feasibility of forming a group aimed at the preservation of organs in churches - campaigning for their retention and use - and also the he-homing of organs which are 'redundant'.

Many green shoots amongst the devastation wrought by the happy clappy brigade.

A laudable proposal.  Unfortunately, the number of active churches seems to be reducing as well.

I must confess to being an atheist and so I do not attend church services.  I am, however, very happy to attend organ recitals.  Perhaps we could follow the lead of the French a couple of centuries ago and convert redundant churches to 'temples of reason'?  I don't know where the money would come from, though.

Re, the happy clappy brigade, I live in hope that it is a passing trend, and that it passes quickly!