Festival audience - 1881
from Westminster Pilgrim; Being a Record of Service in Church, Cathedral and Abbey, College University and Concert Room, with a Few Notes on Sport, page 122:
In 1881 I began to attend some of the great Musical Festivals, going to Worcester as the guest of the Dean, Lord Alwyne Compton; also undertaking the onerous task of writing an account of the proceedings for the Press, a tiresome and fatiguing duty which I never tried to do again. But it was a very pleasant time. One of my fellow guests was Dr. Stone, a wellknown amateur who played the contra-fagotto* at the Festival, and we made a good deal of music at the Deanery. Dr. Stone's instrument was an enormous affair (Santley once told him that it resembled the stand-pipe at Chelsea Waterworks!).… more >>
Frederick Bridge, Westminster Pilgrim; Being a Record of Service in Church, Cathedral and Abbey, College University and Concert Room, with a Few Notes on Sport (), p. 122. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1432826715274 accessed: 28 November, 2024
Listeners
Listening to
hide composers
Three Blind Mice
written by Anon |
performed by Dr Stone, Frederick Bridge |
Experience Information
Date/Time | 1881 |
Medium | live |
Listening Environment | in the company of others, indoors, in public |
Notes
Contra-fagotto: 'This instrument is used by Haydn in his oratorio "The Creation" to imitate the " cheerful roaring of the tawny lion." (Bridge's footnote)