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Six conductors and 60 years: Memories abound for Diane Coutts
By Marlene Ross
The Johannesburg Bach Choir has been associated with some of South Africa’s most talented musicians during the past 60 years. Diane Coutts, who has performed with the Johannesburg Bach Choir as organist, pianist and harpsichordist, twice received the SABC Artes award for best piano recordings and has also received lifetime achievement awards from the South African Music Rights Organisation (SAMRO) and the South African Society of Music Teachers (SASMT). Diane’s association with the Johannesburg Bach Choir goes back to the 1990s. She still accompanies the choir for rehearsals on an ad hoc basis.

Born in Durban, Diane studied piano, organ and flute. Her organ tutor was Errol Slater, who was the organist at St Paul’s Church in central Durban. At one of her piano performances in Durban she was noticed by Ivey Dickson, a professor at the London Royal Academy of Music and the director of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain. She invited Diane to study in London from 1965 to 1966.
On returning to South Africa, she was appointed as the SABC accompanist for Natal in 1970. In 1979 she was transferred to Johannesburg as the official SABC accompanist and as member of the National Symphony Orchestra of the SABC. Diane prefers accompaniment to solo work, because it provides her with the opportunity to share her love of music with other musicians. She explains that in duo work in particular, one is able to share ideas on interpretation with fellow musicians. She has accompanied many contestants at the Unisa International Strings Competitions as well as the Unisa International Voice Competitions, including the winner of the Unisa International Strings Competition in 2010.
Referring to her many piano recordings, Diane explains that she prefers “leaving a recording as a legacy as opposed to playing in live concerts, which is just a fleeting moment in time”. As an introvert, she feels it also better suits her personality.
Apart from her work at the SABC, she also examined for Unisa and was juror for many music competitions. Diane has many qualifications in teaching, accompaniment and performance for organ, piano and flute. Her students excel in their examinations, many of them winning Unisa awards. She is still teaching and has adapted to the post-Covid online teaching and examination methods with aplomb.
In 2019, after serving the Catholic Church as organist for 60 years, she received an award from Pope Francis. Diane is still the organist at St Bonifatius German Speaking Catholic Church in Randburg.
Diane has performed with the Johannesburg Bach Choir as organist, pianist and harpsichordist with six resident conductors – Bruno Peyer, Douglas Reid, Roland Solomon, Colin Yorke, Dario Broccardo and Tim Roberts. Highlights of her performances with the Choir include playing the harpsichord solo part in the Bach Brandenburg Concerto No 5 on a locally built harpsichord for its inaugural performance, as well as the challenge of playing the Mozart Requiem on the organ, in place of a full orchestra.
Diane remains an inspiration to her students and fellow musicians and the Johannesburg Bach Choir is very proud that she is part of the choir’s journey.
By Alastair Findlay*
On entering Sue Webster’s sunny abode one is immediately struck by her collection of beautiful artefacts. A Sydney Carter oil, a Pierneef water colour, and works by her uncle, David Anthony Jones (reminiscent of the works of John Piper and Paul Nash) adorn the walls. Along the windowsills there’s an assortment of decoy ducks and wooden bird sculptures.
“I’m a collector,” says Sue, “and my late husband, Bill, was a minimalist. An interesting dynamic.”

Sue’s mother died young and so she was raised by her aunt, Connie Kinghorn whose son, David, became something of a brother and mentor to Sue.
As a girl in her late teens, she could only yearn to do the wonderful things Dave was doing. He had joined the Johannesburg Bach Choir, something quite out of her reach as sight reading music was a prerequisite. It was a time when one’s auditions were reviewed in the city’s newspapers. Whenever Dave left the house, she would ask, with burning curiosity, “Where are you going, Dave?”
“I’m going out,” would be his lofty reply.
Sue (pictured with her dog Teddy) qualified as a medical technologist and worked with Jemima Cantrell in Braamfontein for many years. Her husband was an electrical engineer. They had two children, and she now has four grandchildren.
She became a member of St Paul’s Anglican Church choir in Parkhurst and became deeply involved with all aspects of the parish. She has been running the fundraising charity shop for many years and also qualified as a lay minister and counsellor with Anglicare. She partnered with Rosebank police station in offering trauma counselling and is currently giving psychological and spiritual support to the elderly at Deansgate Retirement Village in Craighall Park.
When her husband died eight years ago, she joined the Johannesburg Bach Choir, encouraged to do so by Anne Kohler. Sue had always shown an aptitude for singing and had a good ear. Besides, one could take an audition without running the risk of a bad review in the papers.
After being a member for four years, a wonderful opportunity was announced. The choir had been invited to sing at the Bachfest in Leipzig! Sue saw this as a chance to do an extended tour after the Bachfest and put together an itinerary for herself that included going to St Petersburg, sailing up the Volga to Moscow and flying on to Istanbul.
And then, the arrangements completed, the calamitous Covid lockdown occurred. The tour was sadly cancelled.
Despite this potential death knell to the performing arts, the Johannesburg Bach Choir kept going. Every Monday evening the choir director, Tim Roberts, would drive to accompanist Ruth Coggin’s house, and from there the rehearsals continued via Zoom. Enthusiasm and dedication carried the choir through these challenging times. Since then, Sue has seen the choir grow in strength and diversity with many strong voices joining – including a growing number of younger people from all walks of life. She has also since become the leader of the soprano section.
“Music and singing is good for the brain,” says Sue, “It keeps those synapses firing and dementia at bay.”
Alastair Findlay is leader of the bass section of the choir.
The Bach Blog is the official blog of the Johannesburg Bach Choir and is edited by Theo Coggin. The headline for this article is taken from the lyrics of Handel’s The Many Rend the Skies which is among the choir’s repertoire.
Marriage it shall be: the many faces of Bach choir rehearsals
By Lucia Poorter*
Reiner Fossati, who was a member of the choir from 1983 until around 2019, and chairman for seven years, grew up in a musically-minded family in Cape Town, listening to classical greats such as Beethoven and Brahms.
“I also liked Mozart but always considered Beethoven two or three notches above him,” he says.

Reiner (above), who holds a doctorate in operations research and teaches additional maths for grades 10, 11 and 12 at the Johannesburg German International School, says he taught himself to read music at the age of seven or eight. “I was fascinated by anything that could be written down.”
He sang in the choir at the German School in Cape Town from the age of 10, and later, after moving to Johannesburg, was persuaded by a friend who was with him in the army to join the Randburg Male Voice Choir in 1979. In 1983, he responded to an advert in The Star for the Johannesburg Bach Choir.
Reiner remembers the choir having well over 100 members and singing two of his favourite works, Mahler’s Symphony No 2 and the Brahms Requiem, which he says “are both highly romantic.” The Mahler symphony also has “an incredible range for the basses. There is something sublime and kind of spiritual when the whole thing comes together.”
Other favourite compositions of his include Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis, Bach’s St Matthew Passion, and the big Mozart pieces.
Ken Fuller, who was chairman of the choir for more than 20 years, worked opposite the Johannesburg City Hall where the choir often performed, and was therefore usually able to pop across to check that everything was in order before concerts. However, in 1994, after his retirement, and what was to be the last time the choir ever performed in the City Hall, there was a mishap.
“There were supposed to be something like 29 rows of 36 chairs, but there were only 22 rows of 36 chairs,” says Reiner. “This meant that just before the concert was to start, members of the choir were sent down to the basement to fetch extra chairs.”
Another anecdote Reiner remembers is that there used to be a prize for the choir member who sold the most tickets before a concert. There was also a curmudgeonly person in the Choir, let’s call him Robert. Robert sold a huge number of tickets but occasionally someone else would share the prize. Ken would announce that the first prize was a week at Sun City with Robert, second prize was two weeks with Robert, and so on. Robert never saw the humour in this.

Reiner also recalls the choir being hired for a marriage proposal at St Columba’s.
“Someone had to stand guard to watch out for the groom. In the meantime, the wax from the tealight candles, which were laid out in the shape of a heart, leaked all over the floor.”
The bride accepted the proposal. But the choir was left with the challenge of how to remove the wax. (See accompanying photograph.)
English with a musical ring has lifelong memories
By Tim Roberts
Some people one never forgets, often for a variety of reasons. Jane Abrahams, a former secretary, committee member and, not least, an invaluable member of the sopranos of the Johannesburg Bach Choir for many years, is just such a person.
It was not just Jane’s sterling work in the background, or enjoyment of sharing her gift of singing which remains in my memory, however.

When interviewing her recently at her home in Rivonia as part of our celebration of the Johannesburg Bach Choir’s Diamond Jubilee, I remembered that when in the choir, Jane’s eloquence in the use of English came through often as she would draw my attention to an elegant phrase in what we were singing.
I asked her why words were so important to her, little realising that she has been surrounded by words all her life; as a novelist (under the pen name of Jane Fox), a poet, a bookseller, an editor, and for some years a librarian at the library of the Rudolf Steiner Society in Bryanston, Johannesburg.
This simply underlined how fortunate we are as a choir to have members who come from all walks of life. Writers, poets, artists, doctors, builders, lawyers, academics… the list knows no end, and musicians and singers fit in there somewhere as well!
As Jane says when she recalls what drew her for the Johannesburg Bach Choir: “All my family sang in church choirs and choral societies in Essex in the UK when I was a teenager, and it seemed natural to sing in a choir later in life in Johannesburg.”
Jane said one of her favourite pieces is the Faure Requiem, which she regards as a wonderful marriage of words to music.
She speaks with great happiness and delight that her son, Matthew, has also been a member of the Choir, and a grandchild is showing promising signs of carrying on the tradition in the family of making music.
As she approaches her ninth decade, Jane’s love for music is undimmed, and her support of the choir continues.
It is heartwarming to chat to members, not least to past members like Jane, who are part of a continuous group of people from many differing backgrounds who share a common joy in making music together, surely one of humankind’s greatest achievements.