Objects of Substance
Our School song
Nil Sine Labore
The composer of our School Song, Dr Richard Gill OAM, was arguably the most influential figure in music education advocacy in Australia. He was passionate and insistent: everyone can sing; and everyone can compose music.
In 1999, Principal, Mrs Judith Hancock, commissioned Dr Gill to compose our School Song in celebration of the 125th year of the School, coinciding with the turn of the millennium. Originally, it was to be a full orchestral work beginning with a prelude and leading to the song, ‘somewhat like the Brahms Academic Festival Overture’ (Correspondence, 1999). Working closely with Mr Mark Sullivan, Director of Instrumental Music at the time, Dr Gill, aimed to capture the ‘youthful spirit of the students’ (Spring Gazette, 2010).
Mrs Svyetlana Hadgraft, a beloved English teacher who was keenly involved in music, had been tasked by Mrs Hancock to pen the text. With the Principal requesting references to the past, the present and the future, Mrs Hadgraft’s timeless solution was to focus on the enduring ethos of the School: ‘Maintain our founder’s vision bold: a life enriched by learning’.
Dr Richard Gill’s musical gestures are bold, and he played with phrase length and melodic contour. For instance, the opening ‘Nil Sine Labore!’ is repeated and declamatory, while ‘Dare to let your dreams take wing and soar’ is drawn out as a longer, rising sequence of notes, pivoting into another universe and ending in a modulation to another key. As Mr Sullivan recalls, Gill also composed the busy semiquaver accompaniment in the verses specifically to capture the industry and energy of the girls.
First officially performed at the School Executive Induction on 15 March 2000 at City Hall, our School Song was ‘heralded as a great success by the girls’ (Annual Report, 2000).
Mrs Svetlana Hadgraft, Dr Richard Gill and Principal, Mrs Judith Hancock