Rick Wakeman's Silent Nights rock Norwich Cathedral in maestro's seasonal fundraiser
By Michael Ireland, Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News ServiceNORWICH, UNITED KINGDOM (ANS) -- Keyboard virtuoso Rick Wakeman recently brought a huge sprinkling of festive sparkle to Norwich Cathedral with a magical concert of Christmas music and song.
In the magnificent setting of the cathedral, and to a building packed with hundreds, Wakeman introduced a blend of his own songs with some of the best loved festive tunes and carols, says Nark Nicholls writing for the online Eastern Daily Press (EDP) news site at http://new.edp24.co.uk/.
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Keyboardist Rick Wakeman performs at Norwich Cathedral
"With the smell of mulled wine drifting through the colossal nave the audience was taking on a mesmerizing musical journey through Christmas," Nichols writes.
Nicholls says narrators related the history of carols and their meaning before Wakeman and a stunning selection of musicians and soloists -- accompanied by the English Chamber Choir -- gave a unique interpretation of those carols.
Wakeman's daughter, Jemma, sang When An Angel Spoke To Me, before narrator Christopher Strauli portrayed the story of Hark The Herald Angels Sing and the choir, under the leadership of Guy Protheroe, filled the Cathedral with its verses.
Nicholls reports the EDP sponsored concert was held to raise funds for Norwich Cathedral and the Norfolk Churches Trust and is already scheduled to be repeated in 2008. Other key sponsors of the evening were City Living Developments and The Dunbar Bank.
He writes: "The eclectic mix of music had one overriding aim -- to put Norwich well and truly in the Christmas spirit."
Well-known guitarist and a close friend of Wakeman, Gordon Giltrap, gave a number of solo performances in his own inimitable style.
Nicholls says: "While the massive pillars of the Cathedral were not best suited to a good all-round view for everybody, the Cathedral performed magnificently in terms of the acoustics and perfectly carried voices and instruments throughout."
Wakeman, who is a devout Christian and lives on the Norfolk-Suffolk border, also played excerpts of his own pieces themed on the Gospels and relaying the story of Christmas, with narrative by Jamie de Courcey and a solo from Ramon Remedios.
'Twas The Night Before Christmas, was read to musical accompaniment, after a fascinating insight into the inspiration for the popular poem first published in December 1823.
With the story related by Christopher Strauli of children in their beds, sugar plums dancing in their heads in a house where not even a mouse stirred, the audience was enchanted by the musical accompaniment to the verse, Nichols writes.
It continued with the arrival of Saint Nick in his sleigh drawn by Dancer, Prancer, Blitzen and the other reindeer before he descended the chimney and delivered Christmas presents.
Nicholls concludes: "The evening was a huge success, a moving festive extravaganza with a blend of traditional and modern music, seasonal poetry and verse, in a wonderful retelling of the story of Christmas."
** Michael Ireland is an international British freelance journalist. A former reporter with a London newspaper, Michael is the Chief Correspondent for ASSIST News Service of Lake Forest, California. Michael immigrated to the United States in 1982 and became a US citizen in September, 1995. He is married with two children. Michael has also been a frequent contributor to UCB Europe, a British Christian radio station. His weblog appears at: Michael's Wor(l)d BLOG
** You may republish this story with proper attribution.ASSIST News Service (ANS) - PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA
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