The Olavian - 2021

Page 66

A Year of Music

I

n September 2020, St Olave’s reopened its doors again to all students and staff, as the country attempted to bounce back from the effects of a global pandemic. Never has the word “bubbles” been more used than during this period, a time when out of necessity Olavians were strictly divided along year-group lines in terms of both physical space and even daily schedule. Of course, one of the significant negative effects resulting from this was that group music-making could not run as it previously had done for decades. Fortunately, with many additional health and safety measures in place, one-toone instrumental and vocal tuition, suspended since the Spring, could now operate again. The Music Department was grateful that, through increased sanitisation of our building and the shared equipment, much of the curriculum could still be delivered in our two specialist classrooms, despite a system of seven separate year-group zones in place at school. Practical music became possible again, as did composing with the help of Sibelius software. After six months without such opportunities, everyone was very glad to experience music back in their lives in these ways. Through risk mitigation and careful monitoring, we all learned more about the virus and how to live safely alongside each other under what became dubbed “the new normal”. New IT solutions gradually became embedded into everyone’s practice to enable live remote-learning to take place. We created a video to share with the school community as part of an Act of Remembrance for those who died in the two World Wars. Within this, we included Edward Cameron playing the Last Post and Reveille on the trumpet. Along with a Chapel service also shared online, our video helped unite students and friends of the school in our important annual commemoration. Technology also made it possible for students to send us video recordings of themselves performing solo musical items, which were uploaded as a series of online ‘concerts’ on YouTube. Many submissions were received from students in all year-groups, a variety of both sung and instrumental items. In an arrangement by Alfie Beston, The Jazz Chickens performed the school hymn Jerusalem for all viewers to enjoy. It was a joy to be able to see and hear the music students were working on individually, while live concerts still could not go ahead. We even managed to put together a Christmas message, with present and past members of the Chamber Choir all contributing recordings of themselves singing Hark!

64 – Olavian 2021

The herald-angels sing in full four-part harmony. Special thanks go to Old Olavian Lucy Morrell for providing the organ accompaniment and to Alfie for producing the finished audio track. Further developments in our technological capacity led eventually to the possibility of music tuition via live video, which became crucial at the point we were all plunged into the country’s second lockdown in January 2021. Despite glitchy connections and asynchronous remote piano accompanying, students and our visiting music tutors made the best of the situation! Though never a permanent substitute for face-to-face teaching, these interim arrangements did at least ensure that students could once again benefit from this valuable part of their education. The first few months of 2021 were very challenging for everyone, not least for students and staff trying to minimise the negative effects of the pandemic on learning and development. It was with a tentative sense of relief and hope therefore that, facilitated by the national vaccine roll-out, the process of opening up our school could commence in March. The Savoy Choristers were the first at St Olave’s to convene again in small ‘bubbles’. With the return to in-person services at the Queen’s Chapel of the Savoy planned for late in the summer term, the choristers resumed their training after the long break and started to familiarise themselves again with the repertoire. Somewhat depleted in number, I was particularly proud of the boys’ resilience. It was similarly heartening that, in response to our promotion of the choristership scheme this year, we had a record number of successful Year 5 applicants, proceeding to the voice test stage. Voices ringing out once more throughout the school seemed symbolic of a wider recovery and, after difficult times, a glimmer of hope for the future.

Matthew Price

Director of Music


Articles inside

The Annual General Meeting of The Old Olavians’ Society

1hr
pages 113-144, 146-147

Old Olavian

3min
pages 109, 111-112

The Department of Design & Technology

3min
pages 106-107

The Department of Art

2min
pages 102-105

The Sports Faculty

3min
pages 98-99, 101

The Department of Economics

2min
page 94

The Department of Classics

12min
pages 88-93

The Department of Geography

28min
pages 80-87

The Department of History

1min
page 79

The Faculty of Humanities

1min
page 78

The Department of Spanish

1min
pages 76-77

The Department of German

7min
pages 73-75

The Department of French

6min
pages 70-72

A Year of Music

4min
pages 66-67

The Faculty of English & Drama

13min
pages 56-59, 61-63

The Faculty of Science

10min
pages 50-53

Faculty of Mathematics & Computing

7min
pages 46-49

Duke Of Edinburgh

3min
pages 42-44

Duke Of Edinburgh

1min
pages 41-42

Senior Prefect Team 2021 - 2022

7min
pages 31-33

VI Form News

13min
pages 26-30

Salvete - September 2021

19min
pages 12-13, 15-22

Valete - July 2021

1min
page 11

From the Headteacher

1min
page 6
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