Anonymous wrote:I went to NCS in the 90s.
Is there still a stigma to being a choir boy?
Anonymous wrote:Same at both: 8,000 for senior choristers (6-8th grades at STA, high school at NCS), 6,000 for junior choristers.
Anonymous wrote:Anglican Church music has a pretty limited appeal.
Not if you are Anglican! And not if you are among the thousands of tourists, worshipers, and concertgoers who visit the Cathedral each year in part to hear this very repertoire in a magnificent setting.
Anonymous wrote:I went to NCS in the 90s.
Is there still a stigma to being a choir boy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither STA nor NCS gives the program enough props. They need to better advertise the virtues of the program and the accomplishments of the singers. Instead, they herald the Chorale and Madrigals, who next to the Choristers, sound like a herd of dying cattle.
My son was a chorister and is now in the Chorale. I honestly think both groups are excellent. We enjoy hearing the Chorale as much as we did the choristers to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Neither STA nor NCS gives the program enough props. They need to better advertise the virtues of the program and the accomplishments of the singers. Instead, they herald the Chorale and Madrigals, who next to the Choristers, sound like a herd of dying cattle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither STA nor NCS gives the program enough props. They need to better advertise the virtues of the program and the accomplishments of the singers. Instead, they herald the Chorale and Madrigals, who next to the Choristers, sound like a herd of dying cattle.
A little harsh. The choir is really a professional music group. There are many very talented singers at both NCS and STA. But certainly the training the Choristers receive is superior and it shows.
Anonymous wrote:Neither STA nor NCS gives the program enough props. They need to better advertise the virtues of the program and the accomplishments of the singers. Instead, they herald the Chorale and Madrigals, who next to the Choristers, sound like a herd of dying cattle.