
Conductor: Philip Honnor
The following text is an edited transcription of a live radio interview with conductor Philip Honnor, broadcast by Huddersfield FM on 7th September 1998 (four days before the choir's summer concert). The interviewer was Phil Marshal.
Joining me is Philip Honnor, conductor of the Huddersfield Singers. Perhaps you can tell me a bit about yourself. What's your musical background; your musical heritage?Well, I started singing as a treble in church choirs; I was also very interested in playing the piano (in the jazz field, in fact), and I think it was probably my ability to improvise that got me into the Guildhall School of Music. So I then did a teacher year and went on to the University of York and did a degree in composition, and came to Huddersfield as Head of Music at Huddersfield New College. This is way back now... 1971! And I've continued teaching; I've been working at the School of Music in the Technical College since 1982. I've also been doing fairly frequent jazz gigs.
Well, mostly freelance. I phone people up, and with any luck they phone me up, so that's how the gigs come!
The first concert I conducted was Easter 1990. I took over from a chap called Paul Shepherd, who'd been conductor for about five years before that.
Yes, there was a local stonemason called Ben Stocks who started this group in 1875. They were then 25-strong; the idea was to enter a choral competition in Manchester. The group was named the Huddersfield Glee & Madrigal Society, and it duly won that competition, and got a prize of £70, which in today's money must be really rather a lot! And it's been going ever since then.
Actually, just before I started; some time during Paul Shepherd's tenure.
I think so. It had been the "Glee & Mad" for so long (or the "Me & Glad" to some people, I gather!) and it was felt that this was a slightly dated name, so the change occurred at some time in the late '80s. I think he had the idea of reforming as a chamber choir; I think its strength before that was about 60-odd, and in order to do different repertoire he slimmed it down to 30-odd.
Yes, I think that's fair. The choir has accountants, university lecturers, teachers, housewives, electronics engineers...
Basically, yes. Yes, that's it.
Well, we're talking about music obviously that involves choirs, but as for the actual range of stuff we do... we've done everything from plainsong to pop-song; we've done madrigal to oratorio. We aim to have a programme which on average will feature unusual material, and not anything that other local groups will be doing.
Well, I usually choose the programmes myself. That's basically what happens, although obviously I'm open to suggestions as to what we could do, and indeed one of the pieces that we're doing on Saturday (the Five Flower Songs of Benjamin Britten) was suggested by one or two choir members. It wasn't, in fact, a piece which I knew until I started rehearsing for this concert.
Well, we had a concert at this time last year, where we used a Moravian folk-dance group as our guests, and that seemed to be very successful; hence we've got Greensleeves this year. The "fa-la-la" connection is that Italian dance-songs called Balletti became popular in England at the end of Queen Elizabeth's reign, at the end of the 1600s, and they all feature refrains, which come at the end of each verse, which merely have the nonsense words "fa-la-la"; and that's the direct connection.
Yes, we're doing the first set of the Liebeslieder-Waltzer, or love-song waltzes, which are for piano duet and choir.
That's right, we have Elizabeth Wood, who's been a colleague of mine at the School of Music at the Technical College for many years; a really wonderful pianist (as indeed is John) and they make a wonderful duet, and it really lifts the whole thing. We've recently started to rehearse with both pianists (we just had John for the majority of the rehearsals) so we can now hear the whole thing in its full glory, and it really is wonderful; and it gives the choir a tremendous lift.
Yes, I think that's a good summation of the reasons. I mentioned before that we did this, also, last year; that seemed to be very effective, and we hope to repeat the success!
I think there's a wide range of music here. It is, I suppose, at the light-ish end of our repertoire.