Di.Poppitt
GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
In the very early fifties there was a bright idea to form a youth choir to give a performence at the Town Hall. I don't know how other schools chose their budding diva's, but mine Canterbury Road girls, decided that we should line up in the hall, class by class. While one teacher played the piano another walked along our line stopping to listen to each of us as we sang together. I knew I could hold a tune and I really wanted to be chosen, so when I was tapped on the head I nearly choked. There were about six or eight of us and we used to go off once a week for rehearsals in the Town Hall. All of the schools in Birmignahm were reperesented, and we filled the tier below the beautiful organ pipes. Our conductor was Charles Groves, he must have been a very young man then, and in later years I watched him almost with pride as he conducted the last night of the proms.
There were a lot of ups and downs during the weeks of rehearsal, some times we left almost in tears because we hadn't sung well, and we cared, but there were times when we surprised ourselves and everybody else. There was one piece that the more we rehearsed the worse it got, it was called 'How Beautiful are the Feet' :roll: Eventually Charles Groves admitted defeat, and he told us that it was with great sadness that he had decided it would be to everyone's relief if he removed it from the programme.
We might have had a failure but we had a triumph too in 'Hiawatha's Wedding'. We had done justice to it at rehearsal, but on the night of the concert we were majestic, and it brought the house down.
There were a lot of ups and downs during the weeks of rehearsal, some times we left almost in tears because we hadn't sung well, and we cared, but there were times when we surprised ourselves and everybody else. There was one piece that the more we rehearsed the worse it got, it was called 'How Beautiful are the Feet' :roll: Eventually Charles Groves admitted defeat, and he told us that it was with great sadness that he had decided it would be to everyone's relief if he removed it from the programme.
We might have had a failure but we had a triumph too in 'Hiawatha's Wedding'. We had done justice to it at rehearsal, but on the night of the concert we were majestic, and it brought the house down.