Thousands of people across the country enjoyed the recent tour by the Choir of King’s College, Cambridge – the Choir’s ninth for Musica Viva Australia. What audiences didn’t see was a specially arranged meeting for the singers with Australia’s First Nations people.
It’s a damp, misty day on Sydney’s lower North Shore, and the young singers of The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge are having a spiritual encounter with the oldest living culture on earth. King’s College was founded by Henry VI in 1441, a mere six centuries ago. The Cammeraigal people of Sydney, by comparison, have lived on their land for some 50,000 years.
One might say these two cultures are worlds apart. But, as people of all lands have done when they meet, they sing. The excursion to Georges Heights – near Mosman, overlooking Sydney Harbour – has been organised by Musica Viva Australia to give the King’s Choristers and Scholars an understanding of the ancient and continuing story of Australia’s First Nations people.
Artist, curator and writer Djon Mundine, a member of the Bundjalung people of northern NSW, offers the Choir a welcome to Country, and invokes through song the spirit-ancestors who lived and worked on this land. A small fire is lit for a smoking ceremony.
“The thing to remember is that this Country, this continent, is all Aboriginal land,” he says.
“People like you are very important cultural visitors, and we give you a welcome to Country from the traditional owners. I don’t know if you would have King Charles come to welcome you – but it’s the equivalent of that.”
The young men of the Choir respond with the beautiful Irish ballad, The Last Rose of Summer, and their unaccompanied voices swirl with the eucalyptus smoke and the raindrops falling from tree-ferns.