.jump-link{ display:none }

Sunday 13 December 2020

Singing Must be in the Blood - Sepia Saturday

This week's prompt photograph for Sepia Saturd is sub titled "Singing in the Rain".    I can't supply the rain, to match that, but family research revealed that singing of a different kind must be in my blood! 

I  am in an  all singing/dancing chorus, swirling my skirts,  in a  London West End show  - such as Carousel, Oklahoma, or West Side Story ........   

,,,,,,,,,,,,,But It Was All One of My Wildest Dreams!  


Back to reality
In the cast of  Gilbert & Sullivan's "Pirates of Penzance"
I am third girl from the right  
 
The nearest I came to my dream was taking part in amateur Gilbert and Sullivan operettas.  High school introduced me to them - and I was hooked, singing in most of the operas over the years.  At University, I joined the  Savoy Opera Group and the annual G & S performances were the highlight of my years there - I loved taking part in them - the dressing up (the girls made their own costumes -  the singing and some dancing. 

We were not a musical family in terms of playing instruments, but choral music played an important part in our lives. Researching my family history revealed more singers among my ancestors. 




I always knew from my father that his maternal grandfather John Matthews (above)  was a prominent member of the Methodist Church in Wolverhampton, in the English West Midlands,   but had not delved into research to find out more.  But a few years ago  I  heard, through my blog,  from a distant family connection who wished to pass onto a direct descendant  of John Matthews some memorabilia.  Among  the collection was this  silver crested baton presented to John in recognition of his service to the church. in particular in his role as conductor of the choir. 


 
The tiny inscription reads:   
 
Presented to John Matthews By the Choir and Congregation 
 of Wesleyan Chapel, Ladymoor.
28.11.04
 
To hold the baton used by my great grandfather was a delight to me.
 
[As a sideline - of course when my young  granddaughter saw the baton,  her first reaction was "Oh - Harry Potter's' wand"!]

********   
My uncle Fred Weston was a choir boy  at Warwick Parish Church.  My father later oined the parish church choir  and continued singing until late in life, wherever he was living.  My mother joined local community choirs, and from the days of my being in a school choir, choral music has remained  one of my main interests. 


 
 My uncle Fred Weston, born 1905  as a choir boy 
He was the eldest child  of Albert Weston and Mary Barbara Matthews. 


Sadly there is no similar photograph for my father John Percy  Weston, who at the age of seven joined the choir at Broseley Church, near Ironbridge, Shropshire.    I was very grateful to  Broseley Local History Society whose website featured transcriptions from the local newspaper at the time the Weston family lived  in the town.   The frequent reports on church activities presented a picture of what Dad could have well been involved in and he had strong memories of his time there.

 
 Broseley Church
 
I persuaded my father   to write down an account of his early life and later his war time experiences and was pleased to have these, as I have very few photographs prior to his meeting my mother.  He recalled in Broseley:

"Our house was next door to the Wesleyan chapel, and when we were in bed, we could hear the church choir practising.  

We had a "palace" organ double keyboard.  Mum was very musical and Dad, who,  as far as i know  had never had a music lesson,  played in Coalbrookdale Brass Band and could also play the violin.  Mum would play the organ on a Sunday night, and Dad the violin  and we would sing hymns from "Ancient & Modern" [The Church of England Hymnbook] and also Methodist hymns." 

 ********
 
Dad met my mother, Kathleen Danson  in Blackpool, Lancashire. he came from nearby Poulton-le-Fylde and  her Danson family back to 1736 were baptized, married and buried at St. Chad's Church, where I also was baptized and where Dad sang in the choir.   But in the course of my family history research into the Danson family I discovered  another "singing" connection. 


                              
St. Chad's Church, Poulton-le-Fylde, noted for the carpet of crocuses in springtime.
 
My great uncle George Danson (1893-1916) was killed on the Somme.  I traced an obituary in the local press and it included the statement " He was a member of the Poulton Parish Church choir" - I never knew that but it delighted me to find this other side to his life. 
                                               


To the current generation of the family - An Amusing Tale

One Christmas family get-together, after the meal, we children did our party pieces, with mine on the piano. My young brother (right)  decided to plough his way through all twelve verses of "The Twelve Days of Christmas". 

 He developed hiccups and his long socks kept falling down - this was the days of lads in short trousers, despite the weather.   But he was determined to finish singing the long  carol, kept pulling his socks up and hickcupping, and by the end, we were all falling about laughing and we never allowed him to forget this occasion!  He did sing in the junior school choir at the Blackpool Music Festivasl - but that was the end of his singing interest.  


 
 
Singing in a choir (school, church, community)  has been a key activity throughout my life from primary school days onwards, whether it was folk songs, songs from the shows,  opera choruses, spirituals, carols, sacred music  - musical tastes that still mean a lot to me today. I was very happy to be a chorus girl, with no pretensions to be a soloist - I knew my limitations!  
 
My other musical highlight was a few years ago when I  was  one of over a 1000 singers, plus orchestra and organ  in a "Come and Sing" performance of "The Messiah"  in the iconic Royal Albert Hall in London - an exhilarating. moving  and unforgettable experience in front of a packed 4000 audience.  I was on a high,  walking back to our
 
London, Royal Albert Hall, England, Hall, Sightseeing
 Royal Albert Hall, London. Photograph courtesy of Pixabay
I have now decided to "retire" my voice, but music still plays an important part in my life.  Joining a choir is a marvellous form of music making, whatever your age, a great creator of the "feel good factor",  and there is nothing to beat singing with the full blooded accompaniment of an orchestra or organ.   I recommend it! 

  
The Roxburgh Singers  - one of many singing groups in  the  Scottish  Borders
I am among  the altos on the right. 
 
The  musical moments and memories live on.  
 
 
**************

Sepia Saturday gives an opportunity for genealogy bloggers 
       to share their family history through photographs

 Click HERE to read other bloggers' take on this week's prompt below.


 

5 comments:

  1. So great to know the musical interests of your family...lots of singers there! I don't know who might have sung before me, but I know classical music was in my home in the form of long playing records from when I was very young. And I was happily in the audience of ballet and other live classical performances!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sorry, Barbara, but this week I could not access your post. The link kept coming back tomthe Sepia Saturday page,

      Delete
  2. "Singing in the Rain" - a neat and different take on the prompt! How fun to discover you had singers and musicians on both sides of your family tree. But the funnest part of your post was the story of your young brother determined to finish the "Twelve Days of Christmas" depite hiccoughs and falling down socks. I can just see & hear it in my imagination and it's no wonder you were all falling down laughing when he finished - bless his little heart! Kids are wonderful! :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Many thanks, Gail, Even though my brother’s star role happened over 60 years ago, the memory still makes me smile.



    ReplyDelete
  4. Bravo! A great collection of singing stories. That baton is a real treasure. I've often read about them in my research when they were presented to a music director as a gift of esteem. Compared to a modern conductor's stick they are often longer and heavier. I imagine the music direction when using an ebony silver baton like yours was more square than we see today.

    I'm envious of your mass choir concert at the Royal Albert Hall. When I lived in London one of my favorite seats for a concert at the RAH was in the choir stalls behind the orchestra. I my collection I have a postcard from the Crystal Palace of a similar gigantic choir concert with supposedly 700 voices and orchestra of 300. Not what Handel imagined, I think.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your comment which will appear on screen after moderation.