The church choir was under the direction of Sir Henry Walford Davies (1869-1941) from 1898 until about 1920. He was succeeded by Dr. (later Sir) George Thalben-Ball (1896-1987) as organist and director of the choir. Thalben-Ball was to remain in the post for nearly 60 years. (Sources differ on when Thalben-Ball took over, I have read 1919, 1923 and 1924.)
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Temple Church, London |
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Temple Church blitz damage |
Today's post contains a 1959 album of carols from the choir and Thalben-Ball, plus three earlier singles, including the famous 1927 recording of Mendelssohn's "Hear My Prayer," with treble (boy soprano) Ernest Lough as soloist.
The Christmas Carols LP
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George Thalben-Ball |
The opening carol is followed by one of the two spoken passages, Robert Herrick's "What Sweeter Music," presented by the self-assured Richard Brown, presumably one of the choristers.
Among his selections for the balance of this generous program, Thalben-Ball included four arrangements by his predecessor Walford Davies, along with his own arrangement of "The First Nowell" and his setting of "Gloria in Excelsis Deo," which concludes the LP.
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Robin Lough |
The Temple Choir was not as refined as the contemporary Choir of King's College, Cambridge, nor are the arrangements as elaborate. For example, there is no descant in "O Come, All Ye Faithful," possibly because the boys could not manage it. Even so, this is a well-chosen, well-presented and atmospheric program.
Singles from Temple Church
I've added three related singles from Temple Church to round out the program. From 1931, there is a selection of four carols, with the excellent treble Dennis Barthel the soloist on "Lullay My Liking." Also included are Thalben-Ball's "There Is No Rose of Such Virtue" and his arrangement of a "Christmas Lullaby."Thalben-Ball made many recordings as an organist. The second single, dating from 1951, couples his own "Elegy" with the "Introduction and Variations on an Ancient Polish Noël," written by his fellow organist Alexandre Guilmant.
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EP reissue of "Hear My Prayer" |
The final single is not strictly a Christmas item - it is the recording of "Hear My Prayer (O for the Wings of a Dove)" by treble Ernest Lough and the Temple Church Choir, dating from 1927. This is the record whose initial and enduring popularity is said to have made the choir famous.
"Hear My Prayer" comes from a transfer found on the UK's CHARM site. The first two singles are remasters from lossless transfer found on Internet Archive.
The download includes the original HMV LP cover (my transfer was from the US Angel equivalent), an EP cover, two ads, a High Fidelity review, plus the 78 labels and the EP cover shown above. The sound is generally very good, although "Hear My Prayer" is a little dim.