Caractacus Downes

(Interviewed by Kim Liu Leach, February 2020)

When did you first realise you loved music?

I started playing the piano when I was very little, when I was 5 or 6, and I didn’t really get on with that. I always did lots of singing at school. I started playing the clarinet when I was 7 and that was the first instrument that I really liked. My dad was a conductor so there was lots of influence from my parents. My dad was keen for me to play things which is why he wanted me to start playing the piano so early, and because it’s such a useful thing to be able to play. It’s still a frustration to this day that I can’t play it properly. It would be so much more useful if I could. The coordination of trying to remember to do that and wave at the choir in a helpful way sometimes defeats me.

Who are your musical influences?

It depends on what you’re talking about, because I have done lots of different kinds of music. I’ve spent 20 years being a recording engineer and producer with a classical record label, so I have a classical head and I have inherited a lot of the things my father loved. I was particularly fascinated by Russian 20th century stuff – Shostakovich and Prokofiev, and all sort of opera, especially Italian: Verdi, Puccini … But then when I actually perform, I haven’t played in a classical context for a very long time. I play in jazz bands … when I play saxophone, my jazz influences are the obvious ones like John Coltrane. I’ve played in other types of bands as well: swing music of various different sorts.  I also play electric bass and double bass. I have different influences for those, jazz, folk, funk, rock, all sorts.

I’m just like everybody else: I’m influenced by the things that I listened to growing up. I got into pop music in the late seventies – 80s, punk stuff, new wave stuff, and after that the people with the appalling, floppy haircuts…!

First album you bought?

I bought 2 at the same time : ‘Regatta de Blanc’ by the Police and ‘Parallel Lines’ by Blondie

What is your guilty pleasure song?

I’m not very good at having guilty pleasures. There are ones I don’t necessarily tell people about but it doesn’t necessarily mean I feel guilty about them.

At school I went through a phase of being a big Genesis fan. There’s a whole kind of prog-rock thing that I’ve got going on that I’m quite fond of.

Favourite piece of music and why?

There are lots of pieces of music I love, but the one that is consistently important to me, the one that would be the disc that I would save on Desert Island Discs, is Shostakovich’s 7th symphony. It would be a very specific recording – a live recording of it with my dad conducting with the BBC Philharmonic on his 70th birthday. That’s been my favourite piece of classical music since I was very little.

Describe yourself in 3 words

(Long pause)…overthinking, enthusiastic and lucky

How would your wife describe you in 3 words?

It depends what day you ask her. One of them would be ‘Spock’ but I’m not sure what the other two would be…

If you were a superhero, what would your power be?

Flight, it’s quite a cool superpower to have.

Quickfire questions:

Wine or beer?

Beer

Staycation or holiday abroad?

Staycation

Read a book or listen to music?

Read a book

Are you a scroller or a reader ?

Scroller

Starter or dessert?

It’s a tricky one, because a starter can shape the entire meal, so it’s really important. But I do like a pudding.

Waitrose & Partners Community Matters Donation

In October we applied for a Community Matters Donation from Waitrose – the boxes at checkout where they offer you three good causes and you get to put a green token in whichever box you’d like to support. They donate £1000 a month and divide that proportionally between the three causes, depending on the number of tokens in the boxes.

We were up against some stiff competition – Christmas Together (providing a meal on Christmas Day for people who would otherwise spend it on their own), and Coleford St. Johns Playgroup (community playgroup). Not surprisingly, and quite reasonably I think, Christmas Together got over half of the tokens, but we did get a £200 donation, which is very welcome.

Well done Kim for putting the effort into organising this. Fantastic job!

Kim and Crac with the cheque!

Monmouth Town Council Community Grant

We’re very pleased to announce that we have been awarded a Community Grant of £1700 by Monmouth Town Council. When added to the money we collect from the choir for attending sessions, this should give us enough to pay the Musical Directors and to cover the various other costs of the choir for the rest of the school year and possibly tide us over into the start of the next one.

Thank you to everyone involved in making the application, presenting to the Town Council Committee. Let’s hope this is the first of many successful applications!