Monday, 18 June 2012

A Right Royal Knees Up~Part two

The concert on Monday night had something for everyone.  Ten thousand people who won tickets in the lottery were invited to sit around the stadium constructed just for the concert around the Queen Victoria memorial in front of the Palace.  We were not one of the lucky ones so we watched the concert on screens in Hyde Park.  Shirley Bassey, Renee Fleming, Elton John, Tom Jones, Stevie Wonder were just a few of the artists that performed.  The entire concert ended with Paul McCartney singing Let It Be.  This was followed by spectacular fireworks from the Palace which we could see from Hyde Park. 

a few of the giant screens in Hyde Park

Stage being built  around the Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace

The Cenotaph Memorial

Tuesday was the day of the Thanksgiving Service at St. Paul's Cathedral followed by a car procession down Whitehall, with the Royal Family having lunch at Westminster Hall at Parliament.  After lunch they would come back up Whitehall in carriages, around Trafalgar Square and down The Mall to Buckingham Palace for a balcony scene and a fly past of  RAF jets. Those of us in our group that were still standing by Tuesday decided that the best place to get a front row spot was on Whitehall. The Mall was predicted to be mobbed with people, so we thought standing along Whitehall might be a chance to grab a front row spot.  After many hours of waiting, here is what we saw!
Our chosen spot was in front of the Cenotaph Memorial. This was a memorial to those who died in World War I and it later included those who died in World War II.   As all of the marching units and horse units passed, they saluted the memorial.  The men of the Royal Family took off their hats as they passed. 

Harry, Camilla and Charles passing us as they made their way to the luncheon at Parliament

This is one of the units saluting as they pass the Cenotaph Memorial.  These are the Coldstream Guards because their buttons are in pairs and they have a red plume on the right side of their bearskins. Their motto is- Nulli Secundus-"Second to None"


This man in the middle was our very friendly policeman who kindly moved when carriages came by so we could get better pictures.  We had quite a long wait so he kept us entertained with stories of where he had worked during the Jubilee weekend.
This rider is from The King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery which is a ceremonial unit of the British Army. It is a mounted unit and all of it's soldiers are trained to drive a team of six horses that pull each of the six First World War-era state saluting guns.  For the Diamond Jubilee they fired a gun salute on June 2 and a 60 gun salute from Horse Guards Parade on June 5th during the carriage procession.

                            Saluting at The Cenotaph

T

          The Queen rode in her car after the Service of Thanksgiving to the lunch at Westminster Hall.

 
The Processional Route was lined with more than 1,000 personnel from all three Services. It was an impressive sight.  

After the car procession passed, we waited for a few more hours until the Royal Family  came back down Whitehall from Parliament.  
The Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment-The Life Guards and the Blues and Royals- provided a Sovereign's Escort ahead of the carriage procession back to Buckingham Palace.


                           The Mounted Band of the Household Cavalry rode ahead of the procession. 



The carriage with Harry and Kate and Prince William came next.  Harry is on the opposite side of Kate and William.




It wasn't hard to know when the Queen's carriage was coming down the street. The carriage was the 1902 Landau built for King Edward VII. It's the same carriage that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge returned from after their wedding in 2011.  Normally Prince Phillip would have been beside the Queen but since he was in the hospital, Camilla rode beside her and Prince Charles opposite them. 




Charles takes his hat off while passing the Cenotaph Memorial. 


While we were waiting for the festivities, the Service of Thanksgiving was broadcast from St. Paul's Cathedral for all to hear.  The Service of Thanksgiving included the Cathedral Choir and the Choir of the Chapels Royal as well as the "Diamond Choir", which was comprised of  40 children from all over the country singing "The Call of Wisdom" an anthem that was specially composed for the service.  I imagine it will become a popular anthem for youth choirs to sing.    I couldn't help but record God Save the Queen as a way to capture a small part of this amazing weekend.  




Thursday, 14 June 2012

A Right Royal Knees Up~part one


 The fabulous celebration of the Diamond Jubilee was held the first weekend in June, 2012.    If you saw any U.K. news during the first weekend in June, you will know that there was a huge four day party here.  It began on Saturday, and while the Queen was attending one of her favorite horse races, Tom and I were singing at St. Martin in the Fields Church for a "Come and Sing Jubilee Concert".  

Organ at St. Martin in the Fields Church
Come and Sing events are simply to come, rehearse for the morning and then present an informal concert.  People that participate are choral singers so everyone just shows up, gets the music and sings!  It's a wonderful way to keep sight reading skills active and to meet people from all over. I sang next to a woman who had just arrived from Australia and was on a twelve week journey of traveling and doing research.   Our music included some of the great British coronation music:  Handel's Zadok the Priest and music from his Coronation Anthem.  Other music included Vaughan Williams O taste and see (which was sung at Queen Elizabeth's 1953 Coronation) and The Old Hundredth,  and Parry's I Was Glad ,which was sung during the processional at last year's Royal Wedding. It was thrilling to sing these pieces in such a gorgeous setting and it was a fantastic kick off to an exciting weekend.   

The highlight of the weekend was the Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant.  Rain was predicted and this time the prediction was right.  However, everyone was in a Jubilee mood, so spirits were not dampened and the Regatta was a success.  We joined together with a group of American friends and thanks to a friend who lives near the Thames, decided to meet at the river. If it poured rain, we could escape to her house.  We situated ourselves near Chelsea Bridge, where the Royal Family was to embark.  After four hours of waiting (without rain) the River pageant began. As I'm sure everyone has seen on the news reports, it was quite a spectacle.  The first Royal water pageant was organized in 1487 by Henry VII, for the coronation of his queen, Elizabeth of York.  In 1662 Charles II introduced his Portuguese Queen Catherine to the nation. Handel' s Water Music was first played there in 1717 as a relief to an end to the wars with Louis XIV.
I've put together a small snippet of the day through some pictures. 


This boat, the Glorianna, was at the head of the pageant.  It was rowed by 18 oars-men and -women, including Olympic and Paralympic champions and disabled British servicemen.  It was built in just 18 weeks by a team of more than 60 craftsmen.  
The Glorianna



The man powered vessels followed the Glorianna. All kinds of rowers and boats were in this group. It was no small feat that these rowers rowed up the Thames for seven miles on a rainy day.

 They started down the river and then turned their boats around  and saluted the Queen 
 who was behind them by putting their oars in the air.

a group of Maori oarsman from New Zealand






a dragon boat , perhaps?  


Is this what  George Washington looked like crossing the Delaware? 






















Our first glimpse of the royal barge, Spirit of Chartwell was thrilling.  This is the front of the boat.  The boat was turned into a royal barge to look like those of the 17th and 18th centuries, painted in red, gold and purple. The bow had an ornate, gilded prow sculpture featuring Old Father Thames, a pair of scaly, sharp-toothed classical dolphins-a symbol of the Thames-and the royal cipher at the centre.
You can see the Royal Family here.  Prince Charles and Prince Phillip in front, the Queen is in white and Harry,Will and Kate behind them. 

a Royal Vessel which followed the Royal Barge



After the Royal Vessels, came the Dunkirk Little Ships.  If you know the story, you know that these boats rescued the Allied forces who were surrounded by Germans in France. About 700 small craft were taken to the beaches east of Dunkirk.  Some of the ships were sailed by their owners even though it was a naval operation.  More than 338,000 British and French troops were evacuated.  As one British news reporter said, "If it hadn't been for the Dunkirk Little Ships, we'd all be speaking German now."

As a mark of honor, Dunkirk Little Ships are allowed to fly a cross of St. George at their bows.




Queen of the Lake is a passenger boat which operated on Lake Windermere
                      I loved the daffodils on this boat and the celebratory nature of the people on the boat.

The London Fire Brigade was there to celebrate. 


 My favorite boat after the Royal Barge was the last boat of the regatta.  This boat carried members of the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the Royal College of Music Chamber Choir.  They played appropriate music all the way up the river, including the James Bond theme when they passed the MI6 building.  Nothing beat the scene, however, at the end of the pageant when the choir  soaking wet, sang Land of Hope and Glory and God Save the Queen.  Quite an ending to a spectacular day.

Here is a video of the The London Philharmonic Orchestra and Royal College Chamber Choir as they began their journey down the Thames.  By this time, it was raining pretty hard.   Not to be defeated, the choir and orchestra broke into a celebratory rendition of "Singin' in the Rain". I hope this video captures a little of their spirit as they sing.