Re: Becomming a New Dep
Posted: Wed Jan 23, 2008 11:21 am
Blimey Munch, that takes me back. Only me though, half my family are still singing those, "Jesus wants me for a sunbeam" anyone?
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We definately had green cups, I remember I took about 10 to the brew room as I was cleaning out my study on the last day. but all the plates were china......don't you remember the cheers that went up every time a bocker or a squit dropeed a pile of platescj wrote:Didn't we have those institution green, melamine, picnic type mugs (and plates come to that) for meals? Everything tastes odd from those receptacles. RIP urns. Imagine the chaos with a machine - it's Terminator all over again.
Urgh-My-Pancreas wrote:i like the idea of the breakfast club too... did anyone ever go as far to (and i quote) "blaze up" and do some ultra-cool 80s dance-moves to Simple Minds?
i am somewhat doubtful
they have a breakfast club thing at my current school, it's lovely, i can have a cup of tea and a croissant whist i'm on prefect duty!
from what everyone's saying it sounds like there's a disco every weekend... am i correct?
and thankyou still to everyone for all your info so far, it's been a great help!
xx idgie xx
We used to sing that one in the CSSM (Children's Special Services Mission) tent on Plumstead Common. Except that (not knowing Gilbert & Sullivan had got there first) we substituted pirate for pilot.Angela Woodford wrote: Deeply, deeply did I regret at Sunday School that book of choruses called "Golden Bells"! Did anyone else have to suffer from this selection of choruses to which we had also to perform "actions"? Or was the Golden Bells Hymnal a South London Evangelical speciality?
Do you want a Pilot?
Signal then to Jesus!
Do you want a Pilot?
Bid Him come aboard!
For He will safely guide
Across the ocean wide
Until we reach at last
The Heav'nly Harbour!!!
Several hundred of this sort of thing, sung with actions and slightly out-of-tune piano!
I can see that I was fortunate, my parents (nominally Methodist) were not church-goers.MKM wrote:We used to sing that one in the CSSM (Children's Special Services Mission) tent on Plumstead Common. Except that (not knowing Gilbert & Sullivan had got there first) we substituted pirate for pilot.Angela Woodford wrote: Deeply, deeply did I regret at Sunday School that book of choruses called "Golden Bells"! Did anyone else have to suffer from this selection of choruses to which we had also to perform "actions"? Or was the Golden Bells Hymnal a South London Evangelical speciality?
Do you want a Pilot?
Signal then to Jesus!
Do you want a Pilot?
Bid Him come aboard!
For He will safely guide
Across the ocean wide
Until we reach at last
The Heav'nly Harbour!!!
Several hundred of this sort of thing, sung with actions and slightly out-of-tune piano!
Happy days!
WHAT ????????????/Great Plum wrote: whilst they decided that 1 7 year old probably shouldn't listen to Genesis...
It's a good idea to learn the CH hotlist, which is basically the Foundation Hymn, I Vow To Thee My Country, Jerusalem, all that jazz. You don't have to, but it's more fun belting it when you don't have to look the words up. lolUrgh-My-Pancreas wrote:is it important to know a lot of hyms?
the only ones we did at my priamary school were modern ones that made christianity fun for kids... stuff about how great elephants are- oh and by the way god created them! stuff like that. and my current school is just a normal state-school with songs only sung if you choose to go to "pop choir"
should i start lerning stuff like 'shine jesus shine' now?
they sound like something that is very memorable...
Faure? I remember Peter Allwood teaching that to an uncomprehending school back in 1986-ish. Choir sing first, then everyone repeat. Senior boys houses were most fun to watch, trying to remain cool whilst singing classical music. Good to hear it's still being churned out ... Personally, I think you all ought to be made to learn Veni Creator Spiritus in Latin using plainchant off by heart.Eruresto wrote: the Libera Me Domine