An interesting reason suggested for why the Solemnis has not been (much, if ever) performed in South Africa, in spite of good orchestras, instrumentalists and soloists:
" ... I think that the men's voices in the Beethoven are very high with the result that non-professional choirs have difficulty singing them. As most South African choirs (in fact almost all SA choirs) fall into that category, it is not often performed here."
This is precisely why I should like to see the Solemnis introduced down here -- bit by bit if necessary. There are numerous potentially excellent black choirs, but they have been trained in run-of-the-mill church music and been heavily influenced by the ever-popular Messiah (nice bits, but essentially a superficial work and not a good basis to built a professional choral tradition on). Once some of these choirs rise to up the challenge of something like the Solemnis, it is likely to have a generally beneficial effect on the development of choral singing down here.
Sam
" ... I think that the men's voices in the Beethoven are very high with the result that non-professional choirs have difficulty singing them. As most South African choirs (in fact almost all SA choirs) fall into that category, it is not often performed here."
This is precisely why I should like to see the Solemnis introduced down here -- bit by bit if necessary. There are numerous potentially excellent black choirs, but they have been trained in run-of-the-mill church music and been heavily influenced by the ever-popular Messiah (nice bits, but essentially a superficial work and not a good basis to built a professional choral tradition on). Once some of these choirs rise to up the challenge of something like the Solemnis, it is likely to have a generally beneficial effect on the development of choral singing down here.
Sam
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