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SteveBarker77

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Posts posted by SteveBarker77

  1. 10 hours ago, Martin Cooke said:

    That was most useful, Steve, thank you. Could a small set up like this be of any use as a CCTV system between organist and conductor or is there a delay? 

    On the system I've been using, there isn't any delay that is noticeable - there's only about three foot of cable between the camera and the computer, although the projector system sends the HDMI signal about 20m.  There is a way to send the camera signal via wifi or wired network, but this does introduce some delay - how much I'm not sure... it's on my list of things to play around with at some point!

  2. Look into OBS software - it's free, and I think capable of what you're wanting to do.  I'm currently using it on my MacBook with an iPhone and an iPad as the video sources to stream our services but we're also putting the output onto a screen in church to mix in remote readers or preachers, and so people can see more clearly.  To see what we've achieved for next to no cost, take a look at some of the recent live streams on here https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8EzRFqM9LTo4kruuf4qd_w 

  3. From Brownes Facebook page this afternoon:

    Quote
    F H Browne & Sons ltd is delighted to announce that it has acquired the trading name and intellectual property rights of Mander Organs Ltd. From 1st October 2020, F H Browne (Organ Builders) Ltd will trade under the name Mander Organs for all current and future contracts.
    Both companies are based in South East England, and three of the current FHB employees (including myself) are former employees of Mander Organs, so there are immediate synergies.
    We are delighted to have made this transition and look forward to working with our present and future customers both in the UK and Internationally.
    Stephen Bayley
    Managing Director

     

  4. St Stephen's Church, Hales Drive, Canterbury, CT2 7AB

    Tuesday 28th July 2015, 7.30pm

     

    David Poulter (Liverpool Cathedral)

     

    A superb programme of music by J. S. Bach, English composers Elgar, Walton and Whitlock, Noel Rawsthorne (David’s predecessor at Liverpool) and Pierre Cochereau, one time Organist Titular of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, all carefully chosen to demonstrate the capabilities of our newly rebuilt organ.
    Tickets £10 (under 18s FREE)
    Ticket price includes refreshments
  5.  

    Indeed - the piece is published in Carols for Choirs, Volume Five.

     

    The Carols for Choirs 5 version doesn't have the solo pedal reed passage though, but shorter links between the verses. The original arrangement for pianos was by Mack Wilberg.

     

    Steve

  6. Can't help you on the planning front, but as part of "Cornwall remembers" we had a special and well attended evensong today in Truro Cathedral, three anthems: greater love, like as the hart and the Rutter Gaelic Blessing. Organ voluntary was Crown Imperial.

    Good luck tomorrow !

     

    I am currently on holiday in Cornwall and was at the service in Truro Cathedral on Sunday afternoon (and morning too as it happens); very good combination of music and readings, and the Crown Imperial was very good. Only slight disappointment was the lack of reeds used in Greater Love, but as I don't know the organ they may have obliterated the choir, had they been used! However, as I and most of the choir were away, back home they had a quiet said service on Sunday evening with no music at all.

     

    Steve

  7. Sadly I don't have a local music shop that stocks this sort of publication, so before I buy online, would you say the quality of the compositions was superior to those published by other publishers, particularly those, say, who are based in the Suffolk area...? Incidentally, when I was last in London and browsing through the music in one shop, I picked up a book published by said Suffolk based publishers that had been rescanned and published from a copy full of an organist's pencil markings!

  8. Recordings of the Old Willis organ can be found at

     

    http://www.youtube.c...eatagain/videos

     

    That was a trip down memory lane! I had that recording on cassette tape when I was a youngster back in the 80s - at the time having no idea that I'd end up living in Canterbury and regularly taking my church choir (St Stephen's, to the north-east of the city) to sing services there.

     

    Thanks for posting!

     

    Steve

  9. My music skills must be worse than I feared because I couldn't hear SJS in the Toccata, and I played each voice separately to make sure. It'll probably hit me one day.

    Not by any means an exhaustive analysis, but bars 1-9 are based on the opening melody of the verse 'Lord the light of your love...', bars 9-17 the end of the verse, with the 'shine on me' being bars 14-17. Then the refrain is hidden in the quavers of the right hand 18 onwards. These themes are then repeated, developed etc through the rest of the piece.

    Steve

  10. What about using the Oxford Book of Funeral Music for a CD/digital download of funeral music mandated to be used at all civic crematoria in the UK. With no payment to the OUP or the editors?

    In the UK, if you produce a commercial CD which contains copyright items then you need a licence from the MCPS (Mechanical Copyright Protection Sceme) - a branch of the same people that collect royalties for public performances, broadcasting, playing music in shops etc. It seems a payment of 8.5% of dealer price or 6.5% of retail price should cover you... see here for more info: http://www.prsformusic.com/users/recordedmedia/cdsandvinyl/Pages/AP1AP2.aspx It is then the job of the MCPS to pass payment onto copyright holders. I have no idea how such things work in the USA though - perhaps there is a similar organisation?

     

    Steve

  11. I had a recording of my Church Choir singing Fauré's Cantique de Jean Racine flagged as a breach of copyright - I appealed, explaining that Fauré was long gone and that the recording was my own of my church choir and they took down the notice. I was quite flattered that someone might have thought that it was a professional recording.

     

    Perhaps on a slightly similar note, I've been a little frustrated at cathedrals who ask for a recent recording of the choir singing a service when applying to do a visit, but who won't allow visiting choirs to record when they visit. Would the cathedrals be in breach of any copyright or performing rights if I posted my choir singing there, or would it actually rest with me and the choir? are the cathedrals being over cautious?

  12. In the absence of further information about competitively priced striplight-shaped console music lamps, a special-offer anglepoise from John Lewis has been bought. It looks good and does the job perfectly.

    I have a simple desk lamp over the top of my music stand at home, but it doesn't have a switch on the lamp unit, so what I have used which has proved very useful is one of those plugs intended for computers, that switch off all your printers etc when you shut down the main computer. I've plugged my lamp into this which is activated by turning the organ on or off - saves crawling around on the floor to find the plug every time! You can pick them up from electrical stores.

    Steve

  13. This morning we kept to Trinity Sunday, although I did play a bit of the Water Music in honour of a previous flotilla. This evening we had a Deanery Evensong, with Parry 'I was glad', 'Zadok the Priest' and the Accession Day responses from BCP. I didn't have time to learn anything like Orb and Sceptre, but I did use the Intrada by Grayston Ives written for the Queen's Silver Jubilee service and published by Banks in their modern organ music book.

     

    Steve

  14. What was not so enjoyable - but absolutely typical of the stuffy, unwelcoming ethos which still semes to prevail in Chichester cathedral

     

    That's a shame to hear, as the welcome the Cathedral gave to me and my choir when we were singing there the weekend after Easter was the complete opposite - most warm and grateful for our contribution. Such a shame one or two members of a congregation can give this impression, but I think it's probably fair to say there are people like this in most congregations up and down the country undoing the work of many clergy and the majority of those attending.

  15. Unfortunately I have to go and teach A Level Music now, but briefly, as part of my Masters Dissertation a few years ago I researched the Canterbury District Choral Union which held its first combined choirs festival in 1862 (150 years ago next year - the RSCM Area Festival will be acknowledging this). This link will take you to a map showing all the church choirs who attended in 1870 which gives a bit of an idea as to how the Church Choir had become established in East Kent - some of you might find it interesting.

    My own choir (St Stephen's Canterbury) didn't attend and the first acknowledgement of there being a choir at St Stephen's is in the 1880s when there is an entry in the Churchwarden's accounts for copying of music for the choir (as well as for the purchase of wine for the sacrament). We still have weekly Eucharist and Choral Evensong with a choir of over 40 :blink:

  16. Indeed, the organ isn't really that soft (as I remember hearing it there) ...

    I seem to remember someone saying to me once that the BBC don't mic up the organ. I've never been to a 'real' last night, but take a school trip to the Schools Proms each November which includes the Elgar P & C and the organ always sounds (and feels) very impressive; there was one year where, on the encore, the organist played pretty much on full organ - the poor orchestra looked like they were playing but I couldn't hear a thing over the organ!

     

    Steve - procrastinating from lesson planning... ofsted cometh before the week's out!

  17.  

    I visited this house earlier in the year and the steward was very keen for me to play it when she saw me take an interest - don't be afraid to ask if you visit as they seem to like it being used!

     

    Steve

  18. I too would be interested in hearing people's response to this as we're looking at replacing our choir stalls, perhaps with something a bit more movable so that we can use them in different formations or places in the church. However, we'll need to come up with something that is suitable for both adults and children to sit in the front rows as who sits where can change service by service!

     

    Are they going to have them custom made or something more 'off the peg'?

     

    (You haven't been asked by a member of my PCC have you?! :unsure: )

     

    Steve

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