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City Choir takes on contemporary fare
City Choir takes on contemporary fare

Otago Daily Times

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Otago Daily Times

City Choir takes on contemporary fare

Knox Church. PHOTO: ODT FILES City Choir Dunedin, at present with about 80 singers directed by David Burchell, gave a concert at Knox Church on Saturday evening. The choir's repertoire is usually sacred, chosen from oratorios or traditional choral favourites, but on this occasion items in the programme entitled "Darkness and Light" were composed in the past 30 years and possibly not all to everyone's taste. However, a mixed diet is good for all, and contemporary classical music can be challenging for both choir and audience alike. A short early Renaissance hymn by Thomas Tallis preceded O Radiant Dawn, by Scottish composer James MacMillan (1959), which impressed with good balance, dynamic contrast and a nicely tailored final Amen. Guest accompanist Christchurch organist Sea-am Thompson's contribution was Clair de Lune, by Louis Vierne, a rather long meandering piece, well-played by this exceptionally talented young musician and certainly titled to fit the theme. A 30-minute work with Latin text composed in 1997 by Lauridsen (1943) followed. This was a difficult and challenging five-movement sacred work, based mainly on traditional mass form and text. The organ opened with a low growling intro then O Nata Lux achieved well-balanced a capella harmony, before the more animated accompanied Veni, Sancte Spiritus and Agnus Dei-Lux Aeterna, which rambled somewhat until achieving an excellently controlled Alleluia, Amen soft choral fade-out. After the interval, Chris Artley's Matariki preceded a more animated Dark Night of the Soul (Gjeilo 1978) with pulsating 7/8 rhythm, soprano and string obligato (Tessa Petersen and Ngaruaroha Martin, violins, Katrina Sharples, viola, and Heleen du Plessis, cello). A short contemplative organ solo by Briggs (1991) followed, then finally came a real highlight, Luminous Night of the Soul (Gjeilo). A sonorous cello opening from du Plessis welcomed an exquisite soundscape section from female voices. Pleasing lyricism with excellent piano prominence (Sandra Crawshaw) continued throughout, and choral harmony with instrumental obligato gilding was indeed exceptional.

Dr Paul Stephenson: Hundreds remember civil rights campaigner
Dr Paul Stephenson: Hundreds remember civil rights campaigner

BBC News

time31-01-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Dr Paul Stephenson: Hundreds remember civil rights campaigner

Hundreds of people have gathered at Bristol Cathedral to remember one of the UK's leading civil rights campaigners. The achievements of Dr Paul Stephenson OBE, who died in November, were marked during a special service attended by about 400 actions of Dr Stephenson, who led the Bristol Bus Boycott in 1963 and undertook a one-man sit in at a Bristol pub that refused to serve him, helped pave the way for the first Race Relations Act in 1965. Actor David Harewood, who attended the service, said: "It feels like it's my duty to come down and pay respect to someone who was probably one of the first people to stand up with such incredible consequences." At the memorial, The Berkeley Singers, directed by Marie Lee, sang O Radiant Dawn, to get the event under Lord Lieutenant Peaches Golding OBE was among those who attended. Paul Boateng, a member of the House of Lords, told those gathered: "a mighty tree has fallen"."None of us would be here if Paul hadn't refused to give up his seat when they told him to, if he hadn't faced the humiliation of arrest, the finger printing, the day in court, none of us would be here," he said. Harewood added: "He really stood up to bigotry, racism and his fight still today has a lasting legacy."Also paying tribute at the service, Lord Simon Woolley said: "We know about Rosa Parks, we need to know about Paul Stephenson."He added Marvin Rees' election as the first black mayor in Bristol was "due to the work" Dr Stephenson achieved. He also called for a statue of Dr Stephenson to be Trevor Phillips, writer and former politician, also spoke at the memorial."This man was a warrior, but he never entered the arena with rage or fear in his eyes," he said. Earlier this week, Radio Bristol met three people who knew Dr Stephenson personally at The Bay Horse pub in central Bristol. It was here the campaigner attracted national attention when he was arrested after refusing to leave without being served - an event that is now marked by a plaque on its wall. Lilleith Morrison, who co-wrote Dr Stephenson's autobiography Memoirs of a Black Englishman, described him as "our Martin Luther King". Ms Morrison said: "Everyone's got equal rights now, theoretically at least, and it all came about because of what happened in the bus boycott and in this pub. "This pub now represents a way of keeping that story alive, and people can come in and read about it and acknowledge what Paul did. "It's a sort of line of communication from the past to now." She added Dr Stephenson "loved telling" a joke about being the only person to be granted Freedom of the City of Bristol who had spent a night in jail. Dr Stephenson, the son of an African father and mixed race British mother, moved to Bristol in boycott of the Bristol Omnibus Company he organised overturned a ban on people from ethnic minorities working on buses in the city, while his pub sit-in also gained nationwide attention. He left the city in the early 1970s for London, but on his return in 1992 helped set up the Bristol Black Archives Partnership, which protects and promotes the history of African-Caribbean people in the city. He was made an OBE in 2009 for his services to equal opportunities and to community relations - a moment filmmaker Rob Mitchell described as "no doubt one of the proudest moments of his life". "He would have been finally accepted by England itself, his country of birth, the country he loved very dearly, and that was his ultimate form of acceptance I think," Mr Mitchell added.

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