MCS-100  Monkton Combe School
 Centenary Service

  8 May 1968, St. Paul’s Cathedral, London

 

  Introduction

  Sleeve notes

  Audio files

  Images

  Documents

  Personal notes

This web page preserves a record (and the recording) of the Centenary celebration of Monkton Combe School in 1968.  Your recorder (Mike Cowlishaw ») sang as a lead treble that day; some personal notes are below, at the bottom of the page.


Sleeve notes

Here are the transcribed sleeve notes (see below for an image).  ‘The Choir’ comprised members of the Monkton Combe School and Junior School choirs.

MONKTON COMBE SCHOOL
The Centenary Service of Thanksgiving and Dedication
St. Paul’s Cathedral
8th May 1968
Side I

THE WELCOME
        The Head Master (Mr. D. R. Wigram)

PSALM 150
       C. V. Stanford (1852-1924)

LESSON
       Hebrews XI 1,2, 32-XII 2
       Readers: Jolyon Armstrong, Andrew
       Gibson and Michael Hutchinson

PRAYERS OF THANKSGIVING
       Reader: J. C. MacFarlane (O.M.)

HYMN
       Praise to the Lord, the Almighty, the King
       of Creation
       Tune: Lobe Den Herren

  — —

TE DEUM LAUDAMUS
       Kenneth Leighton (b. 1929)

 
Side 2

PRAYERS OF DEDICATION
       Readers: A Minor Canon of St. Paul’s and
       Christopher Hayward (Senior Prefect)

HYMN
       Lord of Creation, to thee be all praise
       Tune: Slane

  — —

ANTHEM
       Thy Word is Truth
       Alan Gibbs (b. 1932)

THE BLESSING

  — —

ORGAN
       ‘Transports de joie’
from ‘L’Ascension’
       Olivier Messiaen (b. 1908)

EXCEPT for the Te Deum, which, for technical reasons, was re-recorded in the School Chapel, the whole of this recording was made during the Service at St. Paul’s Cathedral.

      The Choir is conducted by James Peschek, and the Organist is Christopher Herrick, Assistant Organist of St. Paul’s.  The Choir of Monkton Combe Junior School was trained by David Date, and the Organist in the Te Deum is Ashleigh Tobin.

      The Te Deum and the Anthem (the words of which were chosen by the Head Master, Derek Wigram, and are based on the School Motto) were especially commissioned by the Governors for the Service.  Kenneth Leighton, who has also written settings of the Venite and Jubilate in the commission, has recently been appointed a Lecturer in Music at Oxford University, and Alan Gibbs is Director of Music at Archbishop Tenison’s Grammar School, London.  Olivier Messiaen is Organist of the Sainte-Trinité Church in Paris, and Professor of Composition at the Paris Conservatoire, and is perhaps the most important of contemporary French composers.  This work, one of four Symphonic Meditations, was written in 1932.  It comments on verses from St. Paul’s Epistles to the Colossians: “Let us give thanks to God the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light ... and hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.”
       July, 1968

The discs were manufactured by Sound News Productions, London, from recordings made and edited by Julian Bewick.

Sleeve notes by Ashleigh Tobin.

Line drawing by Stephen Ashton.

       Printed by Dawson and Goodall Ltd., Bath


Audio files

Here are the audio files, digitised from the original vinyl record. For each side (1 or 2) there is an MP3 (compressed audio) file and a WAV file (uncompressed audio).

The MP3 files are recommended for most listeners; they have been lightly edited (using Audacity) to remove clicks and pops.  The WAV files are the original digitisations; they are much larger and are included so they can be re-processed as required.

Type Audio file Size (MBytes)
MP3 MCS-Centenary_1.mp3 23.8      
MCS-Centenary_2.mp3 23.6      
WAV MCS-Centenary_1.wav 242.5      
MCS-Centenary_2.wav 243.4      


Images

Here are photographs of the record sleeve (front and back) and the disc labels (front and back).
Click on any thumbnail for a full-resolution image.  The MCS-Centenary-disc-Images PDF includes all four images.

MCS Centenary disc – sleeve front

MCS Centenary disc – sleeve front

MCS Centenary disc – sleeve back

MCS Centenary disc – sleeve back

MCS Centenary disc – front label

MCS Centenary disc – front label

MCS Centenary disc – back label

MCS Centenary disc – back label


Documents

Here are the documents given to all at the Centenary service; both are PDFs:


Personal notes

Memories

I was a little under 15 years old at the time (56 years ago as of this writing), but the Service is still a vivid memory – along with the hours of rehearsals, viewing St. Paul’s, and the re-recording of the Te Deum later.  It was also the only time that I sang ‘high C’ in public, at the end of the Anthem.  My voice broke two months later, so that Summer Term was also the last time that I sang in a choir.

Listening to the recording now (2024) it sounds over-ritualistic, but at the time it seemed normal and was quite uplifting – at least to that sceptical teenage fifth-form chorister.  And, of course, with hindsight I now understand and can appreciate just how much time must have been put in by the members of staff, parents, and many others, to make it all happen.

I particularly remember James Peschek, the School’s Head of Music, who taught me to sing properly; W. B. B. Cliffe (the other lead treble to sing that high C, and by far the better musician) whose perfect pitch kept me and the rest of the treble section on track; The Rev. Salmon, who took many of us caving that year – which became my lifelong leisure pursuit; and, finally, Julian Bewick who not only created the recording of the Service but later that year introduced me to computing – which became my enduring passion and career.

Mike Cowlishaw », December 2024.

Digitisation/quality

The original vinyl record (see details above) was digitised using a Technics SL–J2 Direct Drive turntable, Edirol AudioCapture UA-1X (Audio ↔ USB interface), and Audacity software.  This combination gives excellent results on test records.

The MCS Centenary audio files linked above are, however, of variable quality – this is possibly due to the analogue tape recorders used and local variations in temperature, etc.

Website files

This web page (and its linked data) is entirely static, with no embedded programming language code, so is ‘archival’.  The files are plain text (with HTML markup), simple documented PDF, and JPEG images.

Copyright

The recording itself, being more than 50 years old, is out of copyright.  All other text, music, and images, remain copyright of their respective authors.

 

This website is compiled and maintained by Mike Cowlishaw; Please send me any corrections, suggestions, etc.
The pages and data here are for non-commercial use only.  All text content © Mike Cowlishaw, 2009, 2025, except where marked otherwise.  All rights reserved.  Privacy policy: the Speleotrove website records no personal information and sets no ‘cookies’. However, statistics, etc. might be recorded by the web hosting service.

This page was last edited on 2025-01-05 by mfc.