The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 9

No.128 The Trusty Servant Angus Watson (Master of Music, 70-83) died on 9 th September, 2019 Nicholas Wilks (Q, 70-73; Master of Music 04-15; Second Master 15-) remembers: Singing as a Quirister under Angus was always memorable. My first concert with him was a Messiah in the Cathedral, and the sheer rhythmic buoyancy he elicited was remarkable. Given the unwieldly size of the choir, and the early 1970s fashion for elephantine tempi and sclerotic textures, in the Cathedral’s cavernous acoustic, this was invigoratingly radical. Angus took enormous care over the preparation of his performances, not only in his mastery of the score itself, but in his research into the historical and biographical context of the work. He once told me that he considered an understanding of this context essential to an understanding of the music, and this was beautifully reflected in his informative and witty programme notes. Above all, he had a wonderful instinct for musical potential, a gift which enabled him to develop the school’s ensembles, whether in the field of orchestras or string quartets. I will never forget an ardent Tchaikovsky Fifth Symphony in New Hall, his own playing in Chapel of Haydn’s Seven Last Words, or his patient coaching of student conductors in Brahms’s First Symphony. Keith Pusey, David Thomas and I were fortunate indeed to inherit such a legacy. Angus with Robert Bottone and Lisa Wilson Captain William Miles Kington DSO Royal Welch Fusiliers (D, 1889-90)  Lt Col (ret’d) Michael Wallis (Co Ro, 86-) reports on a Rededication Service at Tyne Cot and a commemoration in War Cloister. On the 19th June, Captain Kington’s remains were rededicated in Tyne Cot cemetery below the Passchendaele ridge: he had remained unidentified for nearly 105 years. A new headstone was erected over his grave, but this time with his name. A meticulous sleuthing process, by multiple agencies and individuals, had produced enough evidence to convince the MOD and the CWGC that these were indeed the remains of Captain Kington. The threads of his DSO ribbon, won in South Africa in 1902, were a clinching piece of the jigsaw. Present were four great grandchildren. I laid a wreath on behalf of the school; Dr James Webster also represented the Wykehamical community. On 20th October 2019, exactly 105 years to the date of Captain Kington’s death, a ceremony was held in War Cloister opposite the panel on which his name appears. He had been killed during the 1st Battle of Ypres, hit by a German shell in the area of Zonnebeke village. An honour guard of senior cadets formed up before his name and the Headmaster, Contingent Commander Lt Col Sam Hart, College Chaplain Revd Justin White and guests were present. A cross of poppies was laid by his great- 9 granddaughter Mrs Sophie Jones. To my knowledge this is the first occasion of an unknown, fallen Wykehamist