St Peter’s Singers and 18th Century Sinfonia perform Parts I-III of JS Bach’s glorious music for the Christmas season, complete with stunning trumpet fanfares, tender lullabies and a moment of pastoral tranquillity.
With 18th Century Sinfonia using historically informed performance skills on period instruments, this promises to be an evening of sparkling and joyful music-making, made perfect by the uplifting surroundings of Leeds Minster.
Sung in German, with online and printed English translations available.
St Peter’s Singers and Soloists 18th Century Sinfonia
Alexander Woodrow conductor
The 18th Century Sinfonia
The 18th Century Sinfonia is a versatile ensemble of specialist period instrumentalists. Since their foundation in 2001 they have accompanied numerous choral societies throughout the UK in performances of Handel Oratorios, Mozart Requiem, Bach B Minor Mass, Magnificat, St John and St Matthew Passions etc. On Good Friday, 18th April 2025, the 18th Century Sinfonia performed the new edition of Handel’s Brockes Passion in Nottingham Parish Church.
The principal players of the 18th Century Sinfonia also meet to comprise the 18th Century Concert Orchestra, whose performances combine period instruments, readings, candlelight and sumptuous 18th century costume in uniquely atmospheric recreations of 18th century musical life.
Welcome
St Peter’s Singers are passionate about the music we sing and want to share it with as many people as possible. We will do all we can to make anyone who comes to our concerts feel welcome and at ease. So if you’ve not tried this music out before, why not come along and bring a friend? Leeds Minster is an accessible venue with good facilities. Everyone is welcome. What to expect at a St Peter’s Singers concert.
Leeds Minster is about 5 minutes walk from Leeds Bus Station, and about 15 minutes walk from Leeds Railway Station. There is on-street parking on the side streets nearby, as well as the NCP Markets carpark (5 minutes) and the John Lewis carpark (10 minutes).
There is ramp access to the main doors beneath the tower, with entrance to the grounds at the West End by the Lamb and Flag pub recommended to avoid the steps up from the street level. Once inside there there is step-free access to the concert seating and to the City of Leeds Room for refreshments and toilets. Wheelchairs and mobility devices are welcome and can be accommodated.
There’s no doubt about it: Johann Sebastian Bach’s Mass in B Minor is a masterpiece. It is one of the most exhilarating and satisfying works both to perform and to listen to, and probably receives more performances now than at any time in its 275-year history.
We are thrilled to be performing it at Leeds Minster on Good Friday 18 April at 7pm. Tickets are available and you will be very welcome.
At St Peter’s Singers, we’ve been enjoying some wonderful rehearsals: those of us who know the work have loved returning to it afresh, discovering new things we hadn’t heard before; and those who don’t know it have been blown away by the beauty of the music as well as the technical demands it makes on us as singers.
The B Minor Mass is the product of a formidable intellect, a synthesis of Bach’s musical and theological knowledge, his spirituality and understanding of the human condition, and his artistic mastery. And despite its immense complexity, it remains accessible and deeply moving, resonating with audiences across centuries.
You only have to hear the first four spine-tingling bars, as they build to the most impassioned pleading from the human soul, to know that despite the Latin words and the unfamiliar text, this music can speak both to you and for you, whatever you do or don’t believe.
And with those four bars a journey begins, with music that gives voice to deep sadness and grief, wildly joyful dance and celebration, cheeky intimacy, solemn formality, prayerfulness, awe, longing, confidence, even doubt – an astonishing range of human feelings and experience. And all the while working through the Latin text of the Catholic Church’s Mass!
It’s extraordinary to think that Bach himself almost certainly never heard it in its entirety: he only completed it in the last year of his life, and almost certainly didn’t have the resources it requires at his disposal in Leipzig. Listening to it complete, as we do, is a privilege.
But it was composed long ago, and the world has changed, so what does it mean for us today, and does performing it on Good Friday mean anything?
The answer varies, of course, depending on your perspective.
For many, the music still speaks deeply on its own, with a spirituality that touches the parts that little else can reach. It provides a much needed stability and counterweight to the shallow and fly-by-night nature of our Social Media-driven world. The opacity of the Latin ensures that the text is not intrusive. Perhaps the Easter weekend, with its two bank holidays, may bring a slight jolt in the normal rhythms of life, and with it perhaps a prompt to seek out meaning and connection with something deeper than daily life normally offers. Perhaps a live performance in the grandeur of a beautiful church may prove more meaningful than a recording played in the living room.
For Christians, anything that illuminates faith and encourages prayer may be welcome. For those who, on Good Friday, may have experienced a week of intense and dramatic re-enactment of Jesus’ last days and hours, the evening – with Jesus now laid to rest in the tomb – brings a spiritual, almost eerie, peace, and the chance to step back and ponder what it all means. The Mass, reflecting as it does on the sacrifice made by Christ on the cross, is an ideal and – in translation – familiar text, and Bach’s music, as it explores and illuminates it almost clause by clause can undoubtedly bring insight, joy and prayerfulness.
But wherever we come from, Bach’s mighty Mass in B Minor can speak to us all. On the one hand it is steeped in his mature and very considerable understanding of the text, and yet on the other he presents to us the most opaque, mysterious words written in a rich but dead language. It is the music that speaks, conjuring up a sense of great spiritual mystery, meaning and prayerfulness, maybe drawing our tears of sorrow and voicing our pleas but above all calling us to the dance.
Note: This is an annotated form of the programme notes for this recital, exploiting web technologies to allow readers to delve deeper into the biographies of the composers and the meaning of musical and religious terms as they wish.
Mass in B Minor
Johann Sebastian Bach
1685-1750
Ruby Hendry
soprano
Lucy Appleyard
mezzo
Joanna Gamble
contralto
Toby Ward
tenor
Quentin Brown
bass-baritone
St Peter’s Singers
National Festival Orchestra
Sally Robinson leader
Shaun Turnbull continuo
Alexander Woodrow conductor
We would like to thank Canon Paul Maybury, Rector, and the Churchwardens of Leeds Minster for their significant support for St Peter’s Singers, and for hosting tonight’s event.
We would also like to thank The Friends of the Music of Leeds Minster for their generous support.
We remember tonight with the deepest affection and gratitude our Founder and former Director of Music
Photo by Nicki Roach
Dr Simon Lindley (1948-2025)
He was passionate about the music of JS Bach and conducted many inspired and memorable performances
Mass in B Minor
Missa
Kyrie eleison
chorus
Christe Eleison
soprano I, soprano II duet
Kyrie eleison
chorus
Gloria in excelsis Deo
chorus
Et in terra pax
chorus
Laudamus te
soprano II solo
Gratias agimus tibi
chorus
Domine Deus
soprano I, tenor duet
Qui tollis peccata mundi
chorus
Qui sedes ad dextram patris
alto solo
Quoniam to solus sanctus
bass solo
Cum sancto spiritu
chorus
Symbolum Nicenum (Credo)
Credo in unum Deum
chorus
Patrem omnipotentem
chorus
Et in unum Dominum
soprano I, alto duet
Et incarnatus
chorus
Crucifixus
chorus
Et resurrexit
chorus
Et in spiritum sanctum
bass solo
Confiteor
chorus
Et expecto
chorus
Sanctus, Osanna, Benedictus and Agnus Dei
Sanctus
chorus
Osanna
chorus
Benedictus
tenor solo
Agnus Dei
alto solo
Dona nobis pacem
chorus
Text and Translation
The Latin text and an English Translation can be accessed here.
About the B Minor Mass
Bach only completed his ‘Great Catholic Mass’ late in his life, and remarkably, he almost certainly never heard it performed complete. Along with the Kunst der Fuge (‘Art of the Fugue’) on which he was also working in his final years, he seems to have thought of it as a final legacy, a statement both of his faith and of his mastery of Counterpoint. And yet it was not composed in a single act, and he may not have envisioned the whole work when he started on it. So how did this masterpiece come into being ?
Some background: Bach had arrived at Leipzig to his new post as Cantor at the churches of St Thomas and St Nicholas in 1723. He immediately set about re-invigorating the music and for the next five years composed at an astonishing rate: on average a 20-30 minute Cantata every week. In addition, 1724 saw the first performance of the St John Passion, and the St Matthew Passion was composed in 1727. By the last years of the decade he was effectively burned out, at odds with his employers, and settled at that point for using previous compositions to fulfil his church duties.
Composition and genesis
The creation of the B Minor Mass spans several decades but didn’t start in any formal sense until 1733, when he composed a Missa for the Elector of Saxony, which consists of the Kyrieand Gloriasections of the full Mass. He was hoping to secure the title of Court Composer. An offer was eventually forthcoming, but not one that provided the hoped-for exit from Leipzig, and the score was left to gather dust. But this initial offering eventually blossomed into what we now recognize as the B Minor Mass, and actually comprised all the music that precedes tonight’s interval.
The Missaof 1733
The Missa which Bach presented to the Elector of Saxony in 1733 was crafted with meticulous care, showcasing Bach’s ability to intertwine complex Counterpoint with expressive melody, as well as florid duets in the Neapolitan operatic style then in vogue at the Dresden court.
Some of the movements drew on music he had written a long time previously, which he adapted and, as was his custom, took great care to improve. Much of it was composed while he was at Dresden in the spring of 1733, and it was almost certainly performed in the July of that year, but whether Bach directed the performance we don’t know.
With extended fugues and complex choral Counterpoint, ecstatic dances, operatic duets and moments of tender introspection, all underpinned by the considerable resources of the Dresden Court orchestra (three high trumpets, two bassoons et al), it was on a scale never seen before.
This Missa set the standard for the subsequent movements, which Bach would add some fifteen or so years later.
Expansion and completion
It wasn’t until sometime around 1747 that Bach decided to expand the 1733 Missa into a full Mass. Driven perhaps by personal reflection in his later years, Bach embarked on the ambitious task of composing the remaining sections: the Credo, Sanctus, Benedictus, andAgnus Dei. He prepared for this by a thorough study of stile antico (a term meaning ‘ancient style’) exemplified in Mass settings by the likes of Palestrina, Caldara and Lotti.
The Credo(or ‘Symbolum Nicenum’) was conceived on a scale to match the Gloria, making it too long for use in a Church Service (although this has happened!).
Much of it was composed from scratch to fit a carefully designed structural scheme which placed at its centre the three narrative movements recounting the bare facts of Christ’s birth, death and resurrection (Etincarnatus, Crucifixus, Et resurrexit) on which the Christian faith is founded. Of these the Et incarnatus, composed late in 1749 in a late change of plan, is probably the last complete piece of music he wrote, while the Crucifixus, which follows seamlessly on, was originally composed with German words for a Cantata as far back as 1714. The structural change created by the insertion of the Et incarnatus, ensured that in line with Lutheran theology of the Cross, the Crucifixus became the central piece in the structure of the Credo.
It seems that the Symbolum Nicenum left a particularly strong impression on the next generation, with his son Emmanuel, now in Hamburg, composing a Magnificat in 1749 that was clearly indebted to his father’s latest work.
The remaining movements (Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei) were partially assembled from earlier compositions (the six-part Sanctus from 1724, the Agnus Dei (whose origins lay in the Ascension Oratorio BWV 11 or even earlier), and the Dona nobis pacem (which like the Gratias movement in the Gloria repeats music from the 1731 Cantata BWV 29), while the eight-part Osanna and the Benedictus were fresh compositions.
It is extraordinary, but perhaps the hallmark of Bach’s genius, that despite the diversity of styles and forms, the long gestation, and the re-use of earlier material, the B Minor Mass is imbued with a deep sense of coherence, unity and purpose, allowing it to resonate on multiple levels. This may be partially explained by Bach’s incredibly careful planning of the work’s structure, but also by recurring use of themes, motifs and symbolic musical gestures, such as the cross-motif and the use of numerology, even his B-A-C-H signature (German notation for B flat, A , C, B natural – but inverted on this occasion).
Impact and legacy
Since its completion, the B Minor Mass has been celebrated as one of the pinnacles of Western music. Although it was never performed in its entirety during Bach’s lifetime, its significance has only grown with time. His sons performed sections of it, and allowed copies to be made, one of which, remarkably, came into the hands of Samuel Wesley, father of Samuel Sebastian (who was the first organist of this church). So the work never quite fell into the obscurity that befell the St Matthew Passion for a century. Musicians and scholars alike have marvelled ever since at its complexity, beauty, and spiritual depth.
What is the meaning of the Mass in B Minor?
This question is essentially impossible to answer, such is the richness of the music within which Bach wraps the text.
But perhaps the place to start is with the Catholic Mass, which is the primary form of worship in the Catholic Christian Church (including much of the Anglican church, even if it prefers the term ‘Eucharist’). In this service of thanksgiving, the Church remembers and gives thanks for Christ’s sacrificial act of Love in his death by crucifixion on the Cross, through which fallible humankind is reconciled to God. The service re-enacts the Last Supper that Jesus shared with his disciples, and goes right back to the earliest days of the Church’s existence. As such it combines ritual, re-enactment and prayer.
It follows a basic pattern that includes an act of penitence and forgiveness as preparation (including the Kyrie), then an expression of praise and worship (Gloria), reading of Scripture and teaching, an assertion of Christian beliefs (Credo), prayers for those in need, and then the great thanksgiving and sharing of the bread and wine in memory of the Last Supper (incorporating the Sanctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei).
The words usually set to music for the Western Catholic Mass, as here in the Mass in B Minor, consist of what is known as the ‘Ordinarium’ – the texts in the service that never vary from week to week:
A sequence of statements beginning I believe… which lay out the central tenets of the Christian faith, as determined at the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. Note: this was a bit like the final communique from a modern G7 or COP summit, with every clause having been fought over, hence some of the rather strange formulations designed to hold the line against popular heresies (false doctrines). It expresses the core teaching of the Christian faith as it had developed over the three hundred or so years since Christ’s death.
The Sanctus, which quotes Isaiah’s Vision of the Lord , comes early in the Great Prayer of Thanksgiving where those on earth join the heavenly hosts in praise of God. The Benedictus expresses a blessing on Christ.
A prayer to Jesus, the sacrificial Lamb of God, to have mercy and grant us peace.
On the one hand these texts have to be seen as part of an extremely rich ritual whose significance is appreciated more fully with repetition and practise. It should not be forgotten that for millions of Christians over the ages this ritual was conducted in Latin, an opaque and ancient language whose words they may have learnt by rote, but of which they may have had little understanding. So in some senses it was the ritual that was important, not the precise meaning of the words. As such, this means that with musical settings such as the Mass in B Minor, understanding the words is not necessarily essential and the music may convey meaning in its own right.
But on the other hand, it is impossible, especially with the Mass in B Minor, to ignore Bach’s response to the meaning of the words. To take a few examples: the prayerful upward inflections and downward sighs in the first KyrieFugue, the festive joy of the opening of the Gloria, the sense of mystery in Qui tollis and Et incarnatus, the unbridled liberation at the first mention of the Holy Spirit in Cum sancto spiritu, the extraordinary sinking feeling as Jesus’ burial is recorded at the end of the Crucifixus, the chatty intimacy of the Soprano and Tenor soloists as God the Son comes into the picture in Domine Deus, the initial hesitation when the words et expecto are first introduced (‘I look for the resurrection of the dead’) at the end of the Confiteor, and so many more. All these reflect a profound understanding of the theology, and express it in human terms, the musical language of human emotions, thereby repaying the listener’s engagement with a text that may otherwise be opaque and unapproachable.
For Christians, Good Friday is the culmination of a week in which re-enactment of Jesus’ last days and hours is often the primary means for trying to enter into and discover the meaning of those events. But by the evening of Good Friday, with Jesus dead and his body laid to rest, the opportunity arises to step back and reflect on what it all means. There could hardly be a better opportunity for this than that provided by Bach’s Mass in B Minor.
These notes owe a substantial debt to John Eliot Gardiner’s superlative book on Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven. If any of the above has aroused your interest, you would doubtless be richly rewarded by giving it some time.
Come and hear JS Bach’s amazing Mass in B Minor – live!
Two hours of the deepest, most satisfying and joyful music for choir and orchestra you may ever hear – the supreme legacy to us of the greatest composer of the Baroque period, some would say of all time.
Whether it’s the thrill of the high Baroque trumpets, the sense of timeless mystery, the singing, or the searing intensity of the final plea for peace, this amazing music is sure to move you, maybe profoundly!
The beauty of Leeds Minster’s spacious surroundings makes this the perfect opportunity to experience the astonishing power of this sacred masterpiece.
Alexander Woodrow conducts the St Peter’s Singers and National Festival Orchestra (leader Sally Robinson)
This performance forms our annual presentation of Music for Good Friday.
St Peter’s Singers are passionate about the music we sing and want to share it with as many people as possible. We will do all we can to make anyone who comes to our concerts feel welcome and at ease. So if you’ve not tried this music out before, why not come along and bring a friend? Leeds Minster is an accessible venue with good facilities. Everyone is welcome. What to expect at a St Peter’s Singers concert.
The Mass in B Minor is a musical setting of the Latin words of the Western Church’s Mass. It begins powerfully in the Key of B Minor, but visits many other Keys as it explores and illuminates the meaning and significance of each word and phrase throughout the two hours that it takes to perform.
It is performed by Choir and Orchestra, with instrumental and vocal soloists in various combinations providing contrasting moments of more personal and intimate expression between the big climaxes and collective utterances. The high-pitched piccolo trumpets, deployed with all of Bach’s genius, add an ecstatic thrill to the mix.
Bach created the work partially using and adapting music he had already written for other works and occasions. His intention may have been to use it as a means of obtaining new employment, and remarkably, it is almost certain he never had the privilege which we now enjoy of hearing the work in its entirety. It remains one of the towering masterpieces of Western culture.
The performance will consist of two parts, lasting about an hour each, with an interval in-between, during which tea and coffee will be served. A translation of the Latin text will be available at the performance, or you can access the programme notes online. Seating will be on a first come, first served basis. Dress is informal. Doors open at 6.20pm, and the performance will finish at about 9.30pm.
Leeds Minster is about 5 minutes walk from Leeds Bus Station, and about 15 minutes walk from Leeds Railway Station. There is on-street parking on the side streets nearby, as well as the NCP Markets carpark (5 minutes) and the John Lewis carpark (10 minutes).
There is ramp access to the main doors beneath the tower, with entrance to the grounds at the West End by the Lamb and Flag pub recommended to avoid the steps up from the street level. Once inside there there is step-free access to the concert seating and to the City of Leeds Room for refreshments and toilets. Wheelchairs and mobility devices are welcome and can be accommodated.
St Peter’s Singers gratefully acknowledge the generous support of
The Friends of the Music of Leeds Minster
St Peter’s Singers’ presentation of Music for Good Friday is an annual event, given by kind permission of Leeds Minster. It provides an opportunity to hear one of the great works of the sacred Oratorio repertoire in a context that a concert hall performance on a Saturday evening cannot provide, and at a price that more people can afford.
Past works receiving performance include:
Bach’s St John Passion
Bach’s B Minor Mass
Handel’s Messiah
Brahms’ German Requiem
Dvorak’s Stabat Mater
Haydn’s Stabat Mater
Scarlatti’s Stabat Mater
Oglesby’s Penthos
£20 Free FTE/U18 available on-line (see below) or at the door; Early Bird available until 31 December
As in any walk of life, the technology of musical instruments has evolved with time, composers have exploited the new capabilities, techniques have evolved, and so sounds have changed and grown, pitch has risen, and musical styles, performance and taste have changed. And of course, older techniques and sounds have been lost and forgotten.
In our upcoming concert Baroque classics on June 29 we are collaborating, for the first time, with an ensemble that uses Period instruments and uses techniques and playing styles informed by historical research: Manchester Baroque.
So what is all the fuss about ? Here’s a brief explainer.
What are ‘Period instruments’ ?
Period instruments are musical instruments that date from about the time of the music that is being played and are set up in the way scholars think would have been the case at that time. For instruments from the Baroque period (1600-1750) this includes playing at a slightly lower pitch than is standard today.
String instruments such as violins are setup with gut strings rather than the modern ones that are wound in metal, and are bowed with bows of a different shape and tension from modern bows. The result is usually that the sound they make is softer, both in volume and timbre.
The difference in the bows forces the players to rethink how they use the bows to create musical phrases, usually resulting in shorter phrases and a greater degree of articulation, which both serve to make the music more interesting.
Wind instruments, particularly woodwind (oboes, bassoons and flutes) also tend to be softer, with the flutes made of wood, while brass instruments, being made without modern techniques that favour blend and uniformity, and in some cases without modern valve systems, are sometimes more characterful and quirky in their sound – as well as being harder to play.
This all allows some sounds and parts of the musical texture to be heard in a way that isn’t possible with modern instruments, leading a number of conductors and groups specialising in music from periods such as the Baroque period to to discover how the music would have sounded to the composers who wrote it and in particular what the composer’s intentions may have been.
‘Historically-informed performance’ is a term that is used to describe musical performance which combines the use of period instruments with technical and stylistic knowledge gleaned from academic research to produce musical performances that are as close to the intention and maybe the experience of the composer as we can make them.
The quest for historically-informed performance began in the later years of the twentieth century, being initially termed ‘authentic’ performance. However, as the quest developed and matured, its practitioners became more aware of the impossibility of genuinely authentic performance practice and adopted the term ‘historically-informed’ instead.
Historical information about musical performance is obtained by scrutinising original manuscripts, period instruments, treatises on style and technique, images, reports of concerts and any other available resource. It is then tested and validated in practice to determine what seems to work musically and physically.
So for example the precise way to execute the various types of ornament (extra decorative notes implied by a single musical symbol) in a particular region and period may be informed by a relevant document.
On the other hand, agreement that most Baroque music was played about a semitone lower (A=415Hz) than today’s standard concert pitch (A=440Hz) is based mainly on the physics of period instruments and the ease or otherwise with which vocal music by the likes of Bach and Handel fit the human voice.
It is of course impossible to really know exactly how music of times past would have sounded, and it is important to be clear that much historically-informed performance has also been shaped by experimentation, judgment and preference of experienced musicians, and to a degree, audiences.
The thrilling sounds of the modern professional Monteverdi Choir for instance, even with the elimination of vocal vibrato, are unlikely to be true to the sounds that would have been made by the relatively undernourished children and teenagers of Bach’s choirs in Leipzig, let alone the much smaller vocal ensembles that probably delivered the first performances of his St John and St Matthew Passions.
To an extent, this is a compromise required by modern concert hall performances, but also by taste, with the historically-informed styling combined with the sounds of the period instruments delivering truly thrilling music-making for the modern ear, and which the composers may have dreamt of, but possibly not really experienced.