Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

> Forums Rules

A shortened version of the Forums Rules is given below. The full version can be found here.

By maintaining a user account and by posting to these forums, you hereby agree to abide by these rules.

FORUMS RULES - A SNAPSHOT
- Stay safe - protect your privacy and respect the privacy of others
- No abusive, offensive or aggressive postings
- No insults or personal attacks
- No foul language
- No trolling
- No inappropriate or illegal material
- No advertising (including "For Sale" or "Wanted" adverts)
- No crossposting
- No forum spamming
- No defamatory comments
- Avoid using jargon, abbreviations or "text talk"

2 Pages V < 1 2  
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> Music Entering School Assembly, Any recollections?
anacrusis
post Apr 13 2010, 04:23 PM
Post #16


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 5229
Joined: 1-October 05
From: Edinburgh, Scotland
Member No.: 4852



On Fridays, the school orchestra provided the "music" in my grammar school - Mr Ferris was a fantastic music teacher, keen to be inclusive, but much less earnest than that would suggest. He had to teach us to sing the atrocious school anthem too, which made cat-strangling sound like a benign hobby....but that's another story.

So, when the orchestra did the "music" it was Brahms - a slow movement from a symphony, which was about all the somewhat bizarre motley crew of about fifteen clarinets, twelve flutes, twenty violins, ten violas, two cellos, five oboes and a set of timps could manage...
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
clavicembalo
post Apr 13 2010, 04:30 PM
Post #17


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 3701
Joined: 21-November 09
From: Cheltenham
Member No.: 81873



QUOTE(anacrusis @ Apr 13 2010, 05:23 PM) *

On Fridays, the school orchestra provided the "music" in my grammar school - Mr Ferris was a fantastic music teacher, keen to be inclusive, but much less earnest than that would suggest. He had to teach us to sing the atrocious school anthem too, which made cat-strangling sound like a benign hobby....but that's another story.

So, when the orchestra did the "music" it was Brahms - a slow movement from a symphony, which was about all the somewhat bizarre motley crew of about fifteen clarinets, twelve flutes, twenty violins, ten violas, two cellos, five oboes and a set of timps could manage...


My Grammar School had a set of timps too, but they went up in flames when a bagpipe-playing friend of mine decided to set light to backstage in the school hall! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ohmy.gif) The whole hall was gutted - like the rest of us! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif)

He would have been sent to borstal, but a monk attached to the local Catholic School, St.Joseph's (Holy Joe's!) offered to take him off to a monastery instead. Never heard of him again. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/unsure.gif)

By the way, it was a good school; why he ever did it, we'll never know. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mellow.gif)
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
BerkshireMum
post Apr 13 2010, 06:54 PM
Post #18


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 6599
Joined: 20-July 07
From: West Berks
Member No.: 13405



QUOTE(clavicembalo @ Apr 13 2010, 05:30 PM) *

My Grammar School had a set of timps too, but they went up in flames when a bagpipe-playing friend of mine decided to set light to backstage in the school hall! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ohmy.gif) The whole hall was gutted - like the rest of us! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif)

He would have been sent to borstal, but a monk attached to the local Catholic School, St.Joseph's (Holy Joe's!) offered to take him off to a monastery instead. Never heard of him again. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/unsure.gif)

By the way, it was a good school; why he ever did it, we'll never know. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mellow.gif)

I've always felt that anyone who likes the sound of bagpipes can't quite be wired correctly! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/tongue.gif)

(Apologies in advance to all those Scots who will now be up in arms! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/ph34r.gif) )
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
chocolatedog
post Apr 13 2010, 07:02 PM
Post #19


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 3861
Joined: 4-June 05
Member No.: 3798



QUOTE(clavicembalo @ Apr 9 2010, 07:43 PM) *

In my earlier teaching career, when my Tutor Group had an Assembly, I would make sure that we registered swiftly, so that I could get to the piano in the hall in time for me to play something as folk arrived.

Unfortunately though, as the intake dramatically increased, so did pupils' noise level and eventually Heads of House preferred to marshal the troops without a musical backing.

However, I fondly remember marching into Assembly in my own Primary/Junior School years. Many different pieces of music might have been played, but the ones I particularly recall were movements from Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker, in particular, what I now know to be the Miniature Overture, Russian Dance and Chinese Dance. When I hear these played today, they immediately take me back to those early years.

In those days it was played from a presumably well-worn LP, on a Record Player.

Did your school have favourites too?



Whenever I played for school assembly, I used to do fairly traditional for coming in but then something a little whackier for going out - like Teddy Bears' Picnic....
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Maizie
post Apr 14 2010, 07:59 AM
Post #20


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 4862
Joined: 5-February 07
From: Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire
Member No.: 9360



We didn't have music entering or leaving assembly in primary school. We did have a piano that would be played for us to sing hymns to, when the piano playing teacher was around.

At asecondary school, no music at all in assembly - no entrance, no exit, and no singing.

We did sing a few hymns when we had a whole-school mass. That was probably once a term though. If you went to the voluntary mass which was once a week during a lunchtime, that didn't have singing.

Feel like I've missed out on something now with you all getting music to listen to (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif)
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
clavicembalo
post Apr 14 2010, 09:56 AM
Post #21


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 3701
Joined: 21-November 09
From: Cheltenham
Member No.: 81873



QUOTE(Maizie @ Apr 14 2010, 08:59 AM) *

Feel like I've missed out on something now with you all getting music to listen to (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif)


It's just one of those nostalgia things, like catching a glimpse of something or a smell that for an instant takes you back to a certain time and place. I hear an excerpt from a certain piece and I'm immediately back in assembly; only for a moment though!
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
viola-mad
post Apr 14 2010, 12:01 PM
Post #22


Advanced Member
***

Group: Members
Posts: 859
Joined: 29-June 08
Member No.: 33908



My school used to have music for going in and out of assembly to. I liked the way it worked actually - anybody could sign up to play once or twice a term, regardless of whether they had proper music lessons or not. I thought - and still think - it was a good introduction to performance, because most people were not listening that intently so it was a reasonably low-stress environment. Oh yes, and any excuse to have a go at playing with an accompanist!

I still remember some of the "performances" fondly. I remember listening to two girls play the Golliwog's Cakewalk piano duet as we came into assembly and thinking how brilliant they were. Can't listen to that piece without thinking about school assembly!
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
lois
post Apr 14 2010, 12:06 PM
Post #23


Advanced Member
***

Group: Members
Posts: 692
Joined: 14-November 08
From: Walsall - West Mids
Member No.: 44946



We never had music at either primary or secondary school. The music teacher played the piano for hymns but that was about it.

At primary school though I did get hauled up on a regular basis to play my trumpet for everyone at assembly as I was the only person in the whole school to play anything other than recorder (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
clavicembalo
post Apr 14 2010, 12:09 PM
Post #24


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 3701
Joined: 21-November 09
From: Cheltenham
Member No.: 81873



QUOTE(lois @ Apr 14 2010, 01:06 PM) *

At primary school though I did get hauled up on a regular basis to play my trumpet for everyone at assembly as I was the only person in the whole school to play anything other than recorder (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)


... and the trumpet shall sound! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
mel2
post Apr 14 2010, 12:18 PM
Post #25


Virtuoso
*****

Group: Members
Posts: 2445
Joined: 15-May 06
Member No.: 6928



In Primary school we came in to assembly to music from a record player and it was often playing the Grieg 'Morning'.
I remember The Karelia Suite, William Tell (no, not that bit!) and Fingals Cave. Others too, but it was a long time ago and I can't recall exactly.
I don't remember any music in Secondary school assemblies but there may have been some occasionally.
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
Celeste
post Apr 14 2010, 01:51 PM
Post #26


Unregistered









I don't think we had music when entering assembly at any of my four primary schools... However, when I was doing a work experience placement at a primary school last year, they made a point of playing a different type of music to the children every day as they made their way into assembly, and then spent five minutes or so talking about what instruments they had heard etc. I thought it was wonderful!
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post
« Next Oldest · General Music Forum · Next Newest »
 

2 Pages V < 1 2
Reply to this topicStart new topic

 



Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 19th May 2013 - 12:50 PM