The Trusty Servant Nov 2017 No. 124 | Page 15

N o .124 Moberly’s in 1871, progressing to work as a butler in the Warden’s Lodgings and in College Hall. He was appointed Head Porter in December 1908 and held this post until his retirement in 1937. He was remembered for his courtesy and efficiency, and for helping to make home-sick scholars feel more at home. William Appleford was the porter from 1674 to 1696. He was evidently inspired by the example of William of Wykeham’s T he T rusty S ervant foundation as he bequeathed money and land to be used to educate poor children, particularly girls, in the Hampshire parish of Catherington. One of the best-known porters was Alfred Lane Locke. He also started his working life at the College on the domestic staff of a boarding house, then moved into College as a chamberman and was appointed as porter in 1883. It was Locke who transformed the Lodge, his obituary noting that it had become a ‘miniature museum and a focus of College life’ during Locke’s time. Many readers may remember the room as a repository of Wykehamical artefacts. The Lodge remains very much a focus of Win Coll life with the current team of porters providing a welcoming and friendly reception to us all. Vox senum A new forum publishing a selection of responses from our readership. Inspired by Win Coll music (cont’d) James Macdonald (G, 50-55): I would like to add a postscript to this series. I was in Phil’s in the early 50s when Henry Havergal and later Christopher Cowan were in charge of music. I was in Chapel Choir and the School Orchestra for most of my time at the school and thus had a superb grounding in music. But there was another facet of musical life of which no mention has so far been made. That was Wind Band under the redoubtable guidance of Mr Jackson. I never knew his first name, but he used to drive up to Music School in his big Buick and teach all the wind players - yes, all of them; and if there was an instrument he did not play, he would teach himself first, as he did with a fellow Philite of mine with the bagpipes (that Philite, John Maclay, later played them at my wedding and still plays them today.) Wind Band was known as Jackson’s Faction - not very good, but fun. And Jackson’s lessons were fun too. I learned the clarinet and in the intervals when one caught one’s breath he would regale one with anecdotes and facts about music generally and wind instruments in particular: why Brahms symphonies are always played better than Beethoven symphonies; what happened when Bartok and Benny Goodman met; and so on. One day he asked me, would I like to learn a saxophone? A saxophone! Such a thing had never been heard of at Win Coll before. Far too vulgar. So he lent me one and I think I was the first boy in the school to play it. I played it in Wind Band and even played a sax solo in a concert. Some 60 years later, I’m still playing and indeed collecting them. And I play baritone sax in a big band. All thanks to Mr Jackson! John Warrack (H, 41-6): May I add a brief footnote to the memories of distinguished visitors to Win Coll concerts? In Common Time 1946, on 28 th March, so the note in my score records, Henry Havergal conducted a performance in Cathedral of Bach’s St John Passion. The forces were local (in my last half in the school, I was allowed to play the oboe), but for the Evangelist, Henry recruited Peter Pears, who a few months previously had sung the title role in the first performance of Britten’s Peter Grimes. Some 40 years later, I persuaded him to contribute to a series of song seminars I was directing for the Oxford Faculty of Music. He remembered the Winchester occasion, not least because 15 as a then still-struggling tenor he was grateful to accept Henry’s fee - five pounds. Patrick Stables (Coll, 47-52): Alas, mea culpa, I missed David Wilson’s letter in TS122 but I have now read it and also James Steadman’s in TS123. They both remember Glee Club’s performance in 1951 of Messiah in Winchester Cathedral. So do I! It was the first public concert in which I sang as a bass and my parents came to hear it, returning by train and finding themselves by chance in the same compartment as the four soloists. The bass was not wholly complementary about Henry Havergal’s conducting: ‘rushed of my bloody feet’, he said . But the performance bowled me over, and to this day Henry Wendon’s ‘Comfort Ye’ and ‘Every Valley’, sung with clear diction and without any ornamentations, remain the standards by which I judge all others. What David and James did not mention is that the performance ended in a way the Handel had not foreseen. The ‘Amen Chorus’ was barely eight bars in when the Cathedral was plunged into total darkness. We learned that the Dean had instructed yet one more array of lights to be turned on when the ‘Chorus’ began,