Celtic wrote: <span title="Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:41 am">2 years ago</span>
Surpinto wrote: <span title="Tue Jan 03, 2023 10:29 am">2 years ago</span>
I think it's time for a break.
Is it still? You seem to be back in full swing.
Perhaps I shouldn't have posted anything, I just didn't want to disappear without any notice. I have just been struggling hugely with bouts of severe depression, particularly in the run up to Xmas, but had a surprisingly not-awful last week including managing a 5km run yesterday for the first time since October... I'll be around until I'm not.

I hope you didn't take my lighthearted jibe at your now defunct signature line as anything but that. I was happy to see you back and posting here again and wanted to remark on it. Appreciate you letting us know; and it goes without saying that you should take all the time you need. Your choir obligations here are secondary to your health and well-being so please do take care.
Celtic wrote: <span title="Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:41 am">2 years ago</span>
I was quite pleased to find the St Paul's ones. (notice William the YCOTY finalist is in the 2020 one) Post-pandemic they have gone back to not posting any choir clips online! After the glut of videos over the pandemic period, it was such a shame to see them return completely to in-person services only.
The Hampton Court choir is also one rarely seen, they unexpectedly sang a service with Christ Church Cathedral Oxford last year which Christ Church streamed. Other than that the only clips I have of them are ones where Lucy Worsley decided that what a TV program about the history of choral music needs is for the presenter to talk over the singing... and not to play the whole song.
Seems they want to lure congregants back to the pews. Understandable of course, but woefully misguided given how people are in 2023 in terms of both religious observance and the digital nature of modern life.
There are other choirs who have embraced the online aspect of things and are growing. Saint Thomas Church 5th Avenue in New York gets 1-1.5k views per Sunday service and several hundred for evensong. While the Sunday services can be fairly full (though not back to pre-pandemic levels from what I've seen), their evensongs are usually quite empty, maybe just a a dozen people on weekdays, or a few dozen on Sunday unless it's some kind of special service. So the vast majority of evensong attendees are virtual rather than in-person. The Sunday morning service attendance is hardly so lopsided towards the online folks, but they definitely outnumber the in-person crowd.
Saint Thomas Church reported that more and more of their donations are coming from out side of New York and around the world due to their livestreams, so much so that they directly address the online congregation during the official greeting as well as communion.
For a religious organization to disregard the potential reach of their music ministry and to cling covetously to it for the benefit of a small few in today's hi-tech world seems strange and foolish to me. King's College never resumed their audio webcasts after COVID lockdowns ended either. I just don't get it.