The Adobe Flashplayer will automatically play all the tracks. If you like you can elect to skip or play any of the tracks by using the controls on the Flashplayer.
To play the audio tracks you
may be asked to download Adobe Flashplayer
Neil's Comment
Being brought up as an Officer’s kid (aka as an OK), in a Salvation Army
Officer’s household in the 1950s, I became aware of those deep blue
Regal Zonophone 78 record labels from a very early age, and even today I
am transported back to our old Quarter’s living room every time I click
to re-visit Ian’s RZ WebSite and see again that old familiar label. It
is safe to say that almost the whole of my early musical education,
apart from practicing the C scale on a battered old YP Band cornet, came
from listening to so many of those Army 78 recordings, played via a very
primitive “gramophone”, which required the sharp steel “needle” to be
changed after every few plays in order to protect the “record”. Apart
from a few classical recordings, those RZ 78s were all we had, and I
still remember my father’s shock/horror when my older sister came home
with a Glenn Miller 78 with which to sully the family gramophone. It has
been a joy to re-discover all these old boyhood memories via the RZ
WebSite.
Like many radio listening Brits, I have often mentally composed lists of
my favourite eight “castaway “ records, which is why it seemed rather
natural to list my SA choice for the RZ WebSite. Now that Ian has
uploaded upwards of two and a half thousand tracks from which I could
choose, it wasn’t quite as easy as I’d supposed, but it did bring back
oh so many memories. What has surprised me is the number of devotional
works which I have chosen, which I suppose brings home just how much of
a message is contained within our Salvation Army treasury of God
inspired music.
1
The Eternal Quest. Trombone Solo. Soloist Ian
Hankey. ISB. Col B Adams. Ray Steadman-Allen. SLRZ4015.
1966
"The
Eternal Quest" is chosen for many different reasons. Firstly,
because it is more meaningful to me than almost any sermon I
ever heard delivered from a Sunday meeting platform. Also
because Col Steadman-Allen is to me a legend, and in my own
opinion, head and shoulders above almost any other Army
composer. Plus, as I understand it, while actually commissioned
for the outstanding trombone soloist Maisie Ringham, The Eternal
Quest was also written at a time of deep introspection by the
composer, the final trombone cadenza representing the depth of
torment of a troubled soul, leading into the tunes we associate
with the words "I believe God answers Prayer" followed by "Jesus
is looking for thee", which is echoed in the soloist's
triumphant conclusion. There are also a couple of personal
reasons for this choice. The only recording on the RZ WebSite is
of Ian Hankey being accompanied by the ISB, and I am fortunate
enough to remember almost every idiosyncrasy of Ian's
performance, having played a very minor accompaniment part to
Ian's solo many many times with the Wood Green Band in the
1960's, before Ian emigrated to Australia.. Finally, cast away
on my lonely island, it would also comfort me with memories of
home, as Col Steadman-Allen performed our marriage ceremony some
forty odd years ago.
2
The Light
of the World. Meditation. ISB. Col B Adams. Dean Goffin. MF 345.
1950
"The Light of the World" is
chosen because to me it is arguably the finest example of a
devotional composition for Salvation Army Bands ever
written, certainly the greatest of all Dean Goffin's
compositions, interpreting in music Holman Hunt's famous
painting "The Light of the World" showing Christ standing before the
heart's locked door. Written
around the tune Aurelia, so long associated with the words
of "O
Jesus, Thou art standing outside the fast-closed door",
and then asking, in the words of Fanny Crosby, "Behold me
standing at the door - May I come in, may I come
in?" Unfortunately, the Castaway's limitation to eight works
precludes me from including one other of Colonel Goffin's
classics, his majestic "Prelude & Fugue on Darwalls" -
"Arise my soul, arise", which I remember as the
show-stopping Band & Chorus finale at one of the historic
Royal Albert Hall Songster Leader's Councils Festivals, at
the time when Dean Goffin was serving as the UK Secretary
for Bands & Songster Brigades.
3
Songs in
Exile. Selection. Tottenham Citadel Band. J Williams. Eric Ball.
LRZ 4003. 1961
"Songs in
Exile" is another classic Sunday evening Selection, played and
heard so many times, and again as I understand it, written at a
time of great introspection in Eric Ball's life, but always
managing to remind us that "I'm a child of the King". So many
other of Eric Ball's great works stand out as well, including of
course his masterwork "The Kingdom Triumphant" culminating with
the magnificent tune of Helmsley , which is associated with the
words "Lo, He comes with clouds descending", and which can now
also be found in a truly inspirational YouTube video
presentation. Plus of course amongst so many others is his
thought provoking wartime classic, "The Triumph of Peace",
setting to music John Oxenham's words "Peace in our time O
Lord", with probably the finest high Soprano entry note ever
written introducing the majestic final movement. I remember
seeing a visual presentation being given by Croydon Citadel Band
at a Hendon Highlights Festival, where the closing slides
morphed into the Dove of Peace as the work reached it’s
climactic conclusion.
4
Montreal
Citadel. March. Regent Hall Band. H Twitchen. N Audoire. MF 253.
1935
"Montreal
Citadel" The classic SA Band March of all time! Certainly my
most played and best remembered of all the RZ 78 recordings,
with the possible exception of Wilfred Heaton's March "Praise".
So many different memories not the least of which is remembering
my then Corps Band of Leighton Buzzard, taking part in General
Eva Burrows March Past for the 1992 International Congress, and
as they marched up The Mall and swung around the Albert
Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace striking up with
Audoire's famous March. Then there was Hendon Band's "Praise"
cassette recording almost bringing tears to my eyes as I heard
"Montreal Citadel" coming from my car stereo as I crossed the
desolate Cheviot Hills one lonely evening after a long period
away from Army music. And coming more up to date, being
completely blown away by the YouTube video of a Royal Marine's
Band countermarching with the Canadian Staff Band playing a
modified arrangement including scoring for a Military band. Not
to mention another YouTube video of the CSB playing “Montreal
Citadel” in . . . . Montreal Citadel.
5
Portraits
from St Paul's Epistles. Suite. NYSB. BM D Smith. Col B Coles.
TRLPS36
"Portraits from St Paul's
Epistles". Colonel Coles wrote many traditional Salvation
Army Marches, including my own personal favourite "The Young
Salvationist", but "Portraits" is perhaps a more worthy
tribute to his writing skills. Although not heard very often
these days, surprisingly enough it does feature on the
latest ISB "Heritage" recording (!!), but for me, it just
reminds me so vividly of those 1950's RZ 78s, recorded on
three sides and played so many times on that old
needle-changing gramophone. “Portraits from St Paul’s” also
gives rise to particularly poignant family memories, for the
work’s soul-stirring final movement, which Col Coles
entitled “The Triumphant Man”, is scored around Henry
Alford’s paean of triumph, "Ten thousand times ten
thousand", which we sang as a valedictory song at my
father's funeral. "'Tis finished, all is finished, their
fight with death & sin, Fling open wide the golden gates,
and let the victors in."
6
Shepherd
Hear My Prayer. Song. General Orsborn & Harlesden Songsters. E
Rance. MF 338. 1950
"Shepherd,
hear my prayer". We are privileged that so much of the writings
of General Albert Orsborn, the poet General, survived to become
some of the Army's finest songs, in spite of so much of his
early work being irrevocably lost in the bombing and destruction
of IHQ in the Second World War. I only discovered this archive
recording of the General giving an address based around his
heartfelt song "Shepherd hear my prayer" from the actual RZ
WebSite. I have always found this song to be deeply moving, and
although I was too young to ever have heard the General from the
platform, to actually hear General Orsborn giving this short
address while Harlesden Songsters are singing “Deep is calling
unto deep” is a privilege which would not have been mine without
Ian’s dedication to preserving this recorded treasury of the
Army’s heritage.
7
I Know Thee
Who Thou Art. Song. Jubilee Festival Male Chorus. A Orsborn. Ray
Steadman Allen. BAB 3509. 1977
"I know Thee who Thou art" - "The Calvary Track".
A further love poem from the soul of General Orsborn, and to me,
the most precious song in the Salvation Army Song Book, from my
early Corps Cadet days, when every CC Lessons evening ended with
us singing "Let nothing draw me back, or turn my heart from
Thee", to it being sung by our then Corps Officers as a duet at
our Wedding, being sung at our daughter's Dedication, and being
sung at my belovčd Mother’s funeral. Another inspirational song
from the pen of the General is surely "My life must be Christ's
broken bread" to the tune of Spohr, and surprisingly enough, a
further discovery which I have made on the RZ WebSite has been
Eric Ball's Meditation "Spohr", which I also hadn't previously
heard.
8
Spirit of
the Living God. Hymn Tune Arrangement. Brisbane City Temple
Band. L Baxter. arr L Baxter YPRX 1048. 1974
"Spirit of
the Living God". My final choice, and also a work I'd never
heard until I came across it on the BCTB recording. Bandmaster
Baxter apparently was an Australian BM of the old school, who
didn’t believe percussion added anything to an SA Brass Band,
which is a shame, as I missed a timpani roll between the second
and third plays of this simple short prayer chorus. But BM
Baxter was also a man of God who scored this simple chorus
arrangement, which is a pure classic of brass band scoring,
especially for his own Band. It has probably not been published
outside of Australia, but forms my greatest discovery out of all
twenty three hundred tracks which Ian has put up on this
wondrous WebSite. The recording is of excellent quality, the
Eupho "counterpoint" in the first and third plays is simply
sublime, while the final chord with the pedal bass note from the
G Trom echoing into silence brings my “castaway’s choice” to a
deeply satisfying conclusion. Pure bliss. BUT, so many times did
I hear my father use this chorus in his Sunday evening prayer
meetings, that it speaks to me not only of a nostalgic past, but
also of where I should be today. "Spirit of the Living God, fall
afresh on me, Break me, melt me, mould me, fill me. Spirit of
the Living God, fall afresh on me".