The Trusty Servant May 2018 No. 125 | Page 15

N o .125 T he T rusty S ervant Vox Senum Inspired by Win Coll Music… Charles Orange (K, 55-60): James Macdonald reminds us (TS 124) of Mr Jackson and his teaching the saxophone, wind instruments and the Wind Band. Does he remember the small smoke- filled room in which he taught? I think he believed that if he smoked a pipe he would not then get a cold. Michael Pike (G, 54-60): I thought you might be interested to see a photograph of the Phil’s House Orchestra in 1958: it has six of Mr Jackson’s pupils and the leader of the orchestra is Sir Thomas Beecham’s grandson John, who had to show me how to play the timpani ‘off-beat’ in the Pomp and Circumstance March that we were playing. Playing the double bass is Francis ‘Buckie’ Cowan, son of the Master of Music. Needless to say, with such talented musicians to lead us and housemaster Francis King, who was extremely keen, we won the music cups for a number of years. Andrew Gordon Clark (G, 48-52): a brief addendum to Patrick Stables (TS 124) on the 1951 Messiah (when surely Glee Club were reinforced by Music Club, or vice versa). At the blowing of the fuse (I imagined a great strip of lead, about two inches wide, melting away), the organ, presumably having electric action, cut out cleanly; the chorus quickly subsided into a shambles; the orchestra, how- ever, went on playing as if nothing had happened, until HMH tapped his music stand to stop them. It was five years before I sang in a finished performance. John Roskill (D, 48-53): further to Patrick Stables’ memory of Glee Club’s 1951 per- formance of Messiah, I too was amongst those singing when the lights went out, but for me the abiding memory was that, for a few precious seconds before the first cigarette-lighter flame was struck, the only light penetrating the darkness was that of the moon through the stained glass of the West Window. Magic. 15 Three OWs in the same battalion… On noting that Christopher Van der Noot had written (TS124) that it was unusual for any regiment to have three OWs serving in the same battalion, quick as a flash Brigadier Andrew Myrtle (D, 46-51) wrote back: Not that unusual, sir! Lieutenant Colonel DW McConnel (I, 26-31) was CO 1 st Bn The King’s Own Scottish Borderers in the 50s with me as his Regimental Signals Officer and later his Adjutant, and Major AM Thorburn (A, 33-38) as a Company Commander in Malaya and Singapore. All three played for the Free Foresters in a match in Singapore with Captain HE Webb RAMC (G, 40-45) playing in the home team. Major Tom Bird as ADC to Jumbo Wilson… Simon Toynbee (D, 57-62): Lady Wilson - ‘The Alligator’ (TS124) - was a fearsome beast. The wonderful Countess of Ranfurly, whose husband the Earl was a POW, was Jumbo’s private secretary in the Middle East and he asked her to go to Washington, which she was happy to do. Lady Wilson got it into her head that Jumbo and the Countess were having an affair, which was absurd, but Hermione was forbidden to go. She wrote a very amusing account of her war life called To War with Whitaker, who was the Earl’s batman and looked exactly like Mr Pickwick. It would be hard to find a more unmilitary figure. Well worth buying if you can find it on Amazon.