venta: (Default)
venta ([personal profile] venta) wrote2006-01-09 12:59 am

Now we are five

Goodness me, it's a hotbed of activity on this journal this evening, isn't it ? Fear not, I shall lapse into my usual semi-stupor again shortly.

On Friday night I cantered down the M20 to Canterbury for a weekend of Boojum debauchery. As it turned out, I was sadly disappointed. Everyone (me included) was still shattered from bombing about over Christmas and New Year, so we had one of the most subdued weekends in a long time. Even by this morning I don't think we had enough empty wine bottles for a decent game of skittles.

Still, we practised in the lovely pub in Bridge. The Plough & Harrow very generously lets us use their upstairs room for nowt. And has a resident cat (called Thomas) which curls up very tidily. Bridge, incidentally, doesn't really have any bridge to speak of. It's one of those historical wossnames.furry cat curled up on bar stool


Saturday night saw a rather swift tour of five pubs, during which I became increasingly clumsly and kicked a lot of furniture. The lovely [livejournal.com profile] ebee came out to play with us, bringing the charming [livejournal.com profile] ranalf_lj along on the promise of "pirates and swords". Fortunately, he didn't seem to mind the swords turning out to be strangely blunt and unswordy (the pirates were nothing to do with us. Sadly). And she brought cake, too. Mmm... cake.

We had our own cake, as well. Boojum was five yesterday, so we had a cake. With candles. To match our kit, it was black. Mmm... black cake.

I always enjoy Boojum weekends in Canterbury, because of the lovely atmosphere in the house we stay in. Trefor and Rhiannon live in a largeish semi, which is completely packed full of books and hospitality. Walls lined with books always make me happy, and arriving on Friday after a chilly drive to enticing smells of garlic and cheese breads wafting around in the warmth was just great.

You can also always rely on a fairly hefty dose of surreal. Trefor is a clogmaker (which explains the deeply odd 1920s clog-propaganda posters in the toilet), but has done a variety of strange jobs. He also just seems to attract weird stuff. For the first time in ages, he has a clogmaking apprentice (two, in fact). One of the apprentices is, of course, a molecatcher.

We were halfway through a conversation about Terry the Molecatcher before anyone thought to say... what? A molecatcher?

Yes, in the 21st century there is still a guy in Canterbury making a living out of catching moles. Apparently, he works mostly for the landed gentry in the area and as a result (according to Trefor's theory) dresses "the part", the local gentry being snobbish types who wouldn't dream of employing a molecatcher who didn't wear woolly breeches and a flat cap.

And that was before we got onto the conversation about how the best way to eat seagull is to curry it. Which is apparently the kind of thing you do if you're an RSPB warden in the extreme north of the Shetlands.

Accordingly, Trefor is my Designated Hero of the Week. Just because I'm really glad people like him exist. And he's completely rebuilt my knackered leather jacket for me.

Actually, further to my comment several paragraphs back, I should say that I always enjoy Boojum weekends in other places, too. I've just blathered about that endlessly before :)

Tonight, I went to something the like of which I've not attended before. St Mary's in Iffley was putting on Handel's Messiah. Sort of.

Some thoughtful soul had provided an orchestra, a conductor, and four soloists. Which, of course, means that they were still missing a chorus. People who bought tickets were welcome to come along and listen, but were encouraged to grab a score on the way in and seat themselves in the appropriate quadrant of church.

I arrived in (I thought) plenty of time, but only just managed to grab the last seat in the front half of the south side of the church, where altos were packing in four to a pew.

I have a feeling that these things are really aimed at people who are very familiar with the work in question, which I'm not (or not from a singing point of view). The choir I used to sing with occasionally sang excerpts, but I've never sung the whole thing through. However, I figured that I could mung through it. And, if necessary, shut up if things got really hairy. As it turned out, I did both. Alternately :)

Messiah mostly isn't too tricky. There are, however, pages which would prompt my friend AndyY to say that he wanted a clean copy because there was ant shit all over this one[*]. They're largely passages of melismata (ie one syllable, sustained over lots of notes), too, which means that someone with only a hazy idea of what they're aiming for sounds vaguely like they're gargling. I did suffer from a constant fear that the person in front of me would turn round and beat me to death with their hardback score.

My real trouble was that I found the conductor difficult to follow. I don't know why - maybe it was just a conducting style I'm unused to - but it seemed as if she was merely waving her arms about vaguely instead of actually conducting. Still, things only fell apart hideously a couple of times :)

Singing big fat choral works is fun. I must keep my eye out for other places offering sing-throughs. Though I might do my homework a bit more thoroughly next time.

[*] That is to say, there are lots and lots and lots of notes per bar, thus meaning the music is covered with little black blobs.

Grr. I should be asleep. But my conjunctivitis has flared up, and my eyeball's gone all weird and blobby again. And shutting my eye currently hurts :(

[identity profile] ebee.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Next time you head down you should nip into nearish place 'Fordwich' as its officially the Smallest Town In Britain. Which is very exciting. They also have a great bridge that makes for a high collision frequency as its so humped it must have got thoughrally fed up many years ago and kept on sulking. I hold to it Bridge has a Bridge. Over the A2. It was a pre-emptive naming.
I have met the molecatcher! He was working for a family I collected my lot of brats from! Nice guy.
Thanks again...Boojum were wonderfully welcoming and the books had me itching to go investigate- I noted a few good titles though.. 'indonesian mining' from what I could read sideways on the spine looked good. I'd like to have your surrogate mummy on a long term basis though..share?

Sleep well, hope the eye gets better.

[identity profile] edling.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 08:53 am (UTC)(link)
You don't remember who the conductor was, do you? I've got the suspicion it might have been our old choirmistress from back in Henley, who used to hold a 'Bring it and sing it' Messiah every Easter in the church. She still does, come to think of it, but it's in Gt. Giles now...

[identity profile] venta.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:10 am (UTC)(link)
Looking at the bit of paper, she appears to have been called Mary Moore (and probably still is).

I hope she's not a good friend of yours whom I've now been rude about :)
ext_550458: (Handel)

[identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:18 am (UTC)(link)
I'm seriously still interested in this if she is doing it! Any chance you could find out for sure if she is and let me know how to get a place?

[identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 09:45 am (UTC)(link)
It's one of those historical wossnames

It used to have a bridge, but these days they just swim?

wouldn't dream of employing a molecatcher who didn't wear woolly breeches

Moleskin breeches, surely? That way you can tell how good he is just by looking at him.

[identity profile] venta.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:12 am (UTC)(link)
It used to have a bridge, but these days they just swim?

It used to have a bridge, in the days when the whole of East Kent was one big swamp, and indeed at that time it was a bridge of great significance.

However, these days East Kent is (mostly) not a swamp, and you can walk over the bridge without noticing it's there. Think road with small, mossy channel underneath it. If you are prepared to climb out the back of the busstop you can just see the non-watercourse. I believe it does occasionally run still, but it wasn't doing at the weekend.
ext_550458: (Handel)

[identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:19 am (UTC)(link)
As my comment to Ed suggests, I wish I'd known about this, as I would have loved to come along! Let me know if you spot something similar and want moral support. (Although I'm a tenor, so can't offer it in the direct, standing-next-to-you sense).

[identity profile] venta.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:22 am (UTC)(link)
Oooh, cool, I didn't know you were a singy person. Will let you know if I espy other such things.

As my vocal register seems to be sliding downwards at the rate of about a tone a year, I may well be joining you in the tenor section some time before the end of the decade!
ext_550458: (Claudius nobody's fool)

[identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 10:44 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not particularly good at it, or anything. I just enjoy doing it, especially where the Messiah is concerned. I shall be going along to a similar sing-a-long day to do Vivaldi's Gloria and Fauré's Requiem in Birmingham on the 5th Feb, which I'm really looking forward to.
ext_54529: (Default)

Boojum

[identity profile] shrydar.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 02:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh, I like the black kit with the green belts. Very fetching.

[identity profile] lathany.livejournal.com 2006-01-09 06:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Was it black, chocolate cake?

The singing sounds fun, but a problem for anyone not good at music reading. Did anyone step in, look at the sheets and then go back and join the actual audience?

[identity profile] venta.livejournal.com 2006-01-10 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
It was actually fruit cake with black royal icing :)

And yes, sadly, I don't really think a rehearsal-free performace would really work unless you could read music. Unless you already happened to know the whole of the work by heart already.

To be honest, though, I don't think I'd expect there to be many singers of that sort of choral work who don't read music, simply because learning new stuff part-by-part from ear would take such a long time.

[identity profile] ranalf-lj.livejournal.com 2006-01-10 01:11 am (UTC)(link)
'charming' is good.. ;)

There are still lots of swampy bits round east Kent, (sometimes complete with banjo-playing hillbilly types). We just hide them from visitors so they come back. The cutely named 'Plucks's gutter' is worth a visit though, as is 'Ham, Sandwich'..:P

It was very pleasant to meet you. I sincerely hope we will meet again in the not-too-distant future.

Dx