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The
official website of The Beccles Choral Society
A Short History of the
Society
Founded 1874
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This first sketch of a history of Beccles
Choral Society depends heavily on the research of Mrs Anne Gee
(LGSM, M.A.), founder in 2000 of the Harleston Choral Society.
The compiler also acknowledges the assistance of David Lindley
who generously shared his unrivalled knowledge of all things
Becclesian.
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Prehistory
The first mentioned "concert and soiree" given
by something calling itself the Beccles Choral Society was in
January 1851. It took place in the Assembly Room (Public Hall),
and was assisted by members of the Bungay and Halesworth choral
societies. It was, the Norwich Mercury wrote, a success thanks
to the efforts of Mr and Mrs Corbyn, musically active members
of the Independent Chapel (today the United Reformed Church
on Hungate). The event was attended by up to three hundred (where
did they all sit?) Several months later there was a fund-raising
event by BCS in the Beccles Assembly Room, held in aid of the
Beccles Lying-in-Charity (maternity hospital) with a programme
of vocal and instrumental music. Among the fourteen items were
two overtures (Handel's Saul and Mozart's Le Nozzi di Figaro),
an aria from Haydn's Creation sung by Dr. Carnaby, four choir
items, and a series of anthems, glees and madrigals. ... Reserved
seats were 2s. each; family tickets (for 4) were 6s.6d; back
seats and gallery 1s: not inconsiderable sums in those days.
Two years later another concert was held. "On Thursday evening
22 September 1853, at 7 pm for a 7.45 pm start, and assisted
by several amateur friends", notes a newspaper report, "the
eighth concert of the Beccles Choral Society took place in the
Assembly Room." The friends must have been instrumentalists,
comments Mrs Gee, "to make up a small band including piano,
flute and violin. For the first time, a chorus from Handel's
Judas Maccabaeus was included in the choir's performing repertoire."
The choir is founded
Between 1853 and 1874 there is a gap in the records but on 15
September 1874 a proposal to form a Choral Society in Beccles
was announced in the East Suffolk Gazette. Offering instruction
"in both secular and sacred music", it invited anyone
interested to contact Mr Livock, the organist at St Michael's
Church. Thereafter there were regular concerts, for the most
part in the Assembly Room, and occasional fund-raising for worthy
local causes, such as Beccles Hospital (December 1877, December
1878).
Notes Mrs Gee: "... on Tuesday evening 29 May 1877, a concert,
described as a 'selection from Judas Maccabaeus, Mendelssohn's
Psalm 'Hear My Prayer' and a secular selection' was given by
the Society. The conductor was Mr. Livock, the pianoforte player
was Mrs. Corbyn and, on harmonium, Mrs. Harper. Of some interest
is the involvement of a well-known Beccles family: Mrs. Catherine
Crowfoot (nee Bayly), the lady Mayoress, joined the Reverend
Raven and Mrs Kinnell as a soloist, and herself sang the Mendelssohn."
The Society, as reported in the local press, continued to rehearse
and perform in the 1880s, tackling Stainer's "Daughter
of Jairus", Schubert's "Song of Miriam" and Beethoven's
"Ruins of Athens" alongside the established fare of
Handel (with repeated resort to Judas Maccabaeus) and of Mendelssohn.
It was not until 1891, it seems, that the choir first sang a
full version of Haydn's Creation. There is a gap in the mid-1880s
and after the establishment in 1889 of the Lowestoft Choral
Society "there is some evidence of defections from Beccles
to Lowestoft."
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| The Choir pictured
in May 2005 (photo courtesey of David Hermon) |
The Beccles Choral Society continued to give annual concerts,
however, in 1896 performing (extracts from) the Messiah in the
Parish Church together with the choir of St Michael's, before
a "very large congregation". During the Diamond Jubilee
celebrations, there was a grand concert in the Beccles Public
Hall, on Monday 13 December, of Haydn's Creation, "performed
in its entirety with London soloists and a 'full orchestra and
chorus of 100 performers, with leader of the orchestra Mr W.E.
Tuddenham and conductor Mr W. Warder Harvey FRCO, the parish
organist'."
At the same time, we may note, there were many other forms of
music-making in the town. One of the pillars of such vocal expression
continued to be the Congregational Church (the new name for
the Independent Chapel). It remained a lively and leading cultural
body. In Small Town Jubilee, Beccles in 1897 (1975) the town
historian Ted Goodwyn records that there was a Pleasant Sunday
Afternoon Society at the chapel with talks and recitations but
its main attraction was the singing. In Victoria's 60th year
on the throne the club had over 290 members.
A period of decline
The years from 1914 to the late 1930s have been described in
dispiriting terms for choirs of our kind. They were a period
of decline "occasioned both by the First World War and
the development of the gramophone and radio". By the late
1930s choral music had sunk to an apparently permanent "state
of subservience, with orchestral music (formerly a train-bearer
merely) as musical overlord," writes Charles Reid in Arthur
Jacobs' (ed.) Choral Music (1963).
As concerns Beccles Choral Society, Mrs Gee notes something
similar. Records become more scanty "though the Society
performed for the Coronation celebrations in 1910." Disbanded
in 1915, the society was reformed as the Beccles Music Society
in 1918, disbanded once again in the 1920s, and then revived
in 1925. In 1929 the conductor of the revived society (E.P.
Thompson, incumbent of St Michael's) died suddenly and Reverend
Bateman of Geldeston had to hurriedly train the choir for its
forthcoming concerts the following spring. Thereafter it ceased
to exist once again, although Mr E.E. Hales of the Beccles Congregational
church conducted choirs in both Beccles and Bungay.
Three Men in a Train: the society revives
The Choral Society was finally revived in 1935 ("by three
men in a train" writes Mrs Gee mysteriously) and since
then, with the exception of the Second World War, has given
one or more concerts each and every year.
During the 1940s and 1950s Dr Martin Shaw and Benjamin Britten
were both patrons of the society and it regularly joined with
other local choirs (Bungay Choral and Great Yarmouth Musical
Societies, for instance) for special performances. A number
of nationally-known soloists, from Covent Garden, Sadler's Wells
and other concert platforms sang with the society from the 1950s
to 1970s, among them Valerie Masterson in the March 1962 performance
of the Mozart Requiem.
Having long outgrown the Public Hall, except for its Tuesday
rehearsals, and today finding limited space even in St Michael's
Church, Beccles, for all who want to attend its concerts, the
society, faces a new and challenging period in its evolution.
JC May 2005
The Beccles Choral Society would like to thank Mrs Anne
Gee for sharing her discoveries and looks forward o the publication
of her "Study of Some East Anglian Choral Societies, 1824-1960
WE WOULD ALSO WELCOME ANY PHOTOS, clippings, reminiscences or
other materials about the Society that anyone has, whether it
concerns the early days or more recent history. If you have
such records or mementoes, please get in touch with BCS.
THREE MEN ON A TRAIN: A REPLY (27 MAY 2005)
My grandfather A.F. Groom, my uncle O. Lloyd Smith and their
acquaintance Percy Blake all travelled daily from Lowestoft
to Beccles by train and eventually became residents of our town.
They deplored the fact there was no a choral society in Beccles
and in 1934 a public meeting was convened.)
Grandfather was elected chairman. He had a fine tenor voice
and, for nearly 40 years, was much in demand for solo performances
in the Lowestoft area. (Later he served as organist at St Michael's
Church throughout the 1939-45 war.) Mr Blake, a schoolmaster,
became secretary; and Uncle undertook the position of accompanist,
in tandem with R.H. Firth. Two years later Mr Firth took over
as conductor of the society, a position he held for 41 years.
His long service was given special recognition at a concert
held in his honour in 1979.)
Contrary to what was implied in Mr Crowfoot's article (Beccles
& Bungay, 20 May), many concerts were given by the society
during the war years, despite a lack of tenors and basses. Often
they were in aid of national events such as Battle of Britain
week and Wings for Victory week. Peace was heralded in 1945
by a performance of Merrie England in the Public Hall. There
was a chorus of just 28 members, including four tenors and four
basses.)
(Brian Patrick, Beccles & Bungay, 27 May 2005)
IN TOWN AND VILLAGE
"Unusual experience of Beccles Choral Society's conductor"
Beccles & Bungay Journal, 11 May 1935
Beccles Choral Society, founded just over seven months ago,
is fortunate to have such a talented honourary conductor as
Mr W. Storeton-West, who for some time has been organist and
choirmaster at Beccles Parish Church. Once the services of Mr
Storeton-West had been obtained the problem was to get him home
owning to the lack of late trains to Lowestoft: the last leaves
Beccles Station at 8.45 pm when the members of the enthusiastic
Society are busily engaged in their weekly practice. A rota
of car owners was prepared, and these friends carried out their
duties most willingly.)
The secretary, in his annual report, outlined the help given
by the car owners. Much amusement was caused, however, when
Mr O. Lloyd Smith, who was largely instrumental in brting the
Society into being, commented that no reference had been made
to the occasion on which the Society's conductor Mr Storeton-West
walked back to Lowestoft. He had missed the train and had to
foot it home, walking the whole nine miles and arriving at 11.30
pm. Immediately an enthusiastic member of the society, Mr C.A.
Stannard, who is proprietor of the Anglian Garage, Beccles,
jumped up and said that the conductor need never walk home again
if he missed his train. All he had to do was go to the garage
and ask for a car.)
A little later in the meeting the conductor made a hurried departure
to catch his train but in spite of a big effort he saw, on reaching
Beccles station, that it had started on its way to Lowestoft.
He returned to the meeting and Mr Stannard immediately offered
to put his promise into execution. Mr Storeton-West, however,
remained to the finish of the Annual General Meeting and was
then conveyed home.)
Already thoughts are turning to the Society's second season
which starts on Thursday, 24 September, and Mr Storeton-West
is again to be in charge. Haydn's "Creation" will
be the sacred work and an invitation has been received from
the Congregational church to give it there.) |
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