Q Newsletter Q News 2016/2017 | Page 20

mistake. Four tackled the autobahns with nothing but a questionable playlist and a monster pack of Snickers bars, wondering how the two other drivers made it to Dresden eight hours before they did. Vast quantities of cake and schnitzel were consumed. A teddy bear spent a lonely night in Dresden while the Pilgrims’ boys caroused in the Leipzig Bierkeller where Goethe’s Faust and Mephistopheles fought their final battle, before being retrieved the following day. Singsongs around the off- key hotel piano became a feature of the last two nights. We stopped at telling tales and competing for a free dinner, although this didn’t stop Dr Hands generously covering lunch in Eisenach. What goes on tour, stays on tour. Stiftskirche and Howells from Jamal Sutton in assorted organ lofts. There were Tippett’s spirituals Steal Away and Deep River, Oli Tarney’s Come Let Us Return to the Lord, Bruckner’s thunderblast Christus factus est employing the vast acoustic of Dresden’s glittering Frauenkirche to the full and Duruflé’s mesmerising Ubi caritas doing the same. The highlight for many was hearing Bach’s motet Komm, Jesu, Komm in the Thomaskirche itself; the choir had the additional thrill of all but standing on Bach’s grave as they sang it. Malcolm’s setting of Were you there when they crucified my Lord? met with a particularly enthusiastic response from universally appreciative audiences, who packed out all the venues. Lucy Stewart, Q Parent (yr 6) In the manner of all good pilgrimages, the Pilgrims’ boys dropped in and out of proceedings via Heathrow and Folkestone, Calais and Dusseldorf, Geneva and Singapore, Berlin and the Czech Republic. One returned to the Czech Republic by St Thomaskirche, Leipzig During the Easter holiday I went on the Winchester College Chapel Choir trip to Germany on what was my last Quirister tour. I found that the mixture of the local people being friendly, knowledgeable and appreciative as an audience, (including a standing ovation at Roemhild after the last concert), and the imposing architecture meant Germany was an extraordinary place to go on tour. It was full of excitement, musical significance (J S Bach!) and history. The Frauenkirche in Dresden (rebuilt after the war and only finished in 2005) was a vast open space with elaborate decoration and it resembled an opera house with a little antechapel. It was unbelievable to Q’s rehearsing for concert 20