Bach’s St John Passion

Johannespassion - Bach's St John Passion

A preview

As our Good Friday presentation of Bach’s magnificent St John Passion on Friday 29 March draws near, this offers a little by way of background about the work and its creation, as well as something about what you can expect if you come to hear it.

Background

The tradition of reciting the Gospel story of Christ’s last hours and death as part of Christian worship during Passiontide goes back many centuries. Spoken or sung to simple plainchant, the words of the characters would be voiced by different readers and the congregation would take the role of the crowd.

Apart from maybe the addition of a Chorale (or hymn), this had changed very little in the Lutheran Church until just a few years before Bach wrote the St John Passion in 1724.

This began to change in 1712, in Hamburg, when Heinrich Brockes produced a poetic text which paraphrased some parts of the biblical text, and added in a number of reflective if rather mawkish texts. Telemann and Handel were among those who, controversially, wrote elaborate, expressive music for Brockes’ text in a trend whose popularity eventually reached Telemann’s former stamping ground, the Neukirche in Leipzig.

Here, finally responding to loss of congregations, the more traditional regimes at the Thomaskirche and Nicolaikirche only relented and allowed more elaborate music just three years before Bach arrived as their Kantor in May 1723. The St John Passion was composed less than a year later, and, typically for Bach, elevated the trend to new heights.

Why is Bach’s St John Passion so special?

Firstly, Bach returned to the scriptural texts and then selected, altered and replaced Brockes’ poetic texts to bring a more serious theological tone to the work.

Secondly, he composed music of a sustained dramatic intensity never heard before outside the opera house.

Thirdly, through his command of highly chromatic harmonies he was able to transform what had become somewhat cliched musical tropes of the Baroque era into music that even now reaches far deeper and more authentically into the human psyche.

While shocking to some as it was, this should not have come as a surprise, as it represented the continuation of a clear and evolving intent on Bach’s part, shown in his weekly cantatas, to offer a blend of word and music that could engage both the intellect and the emotions of the faithful and so assist them in their devotions.

Engagement with the Gospel

In his magisterial study of Bach, Music in the Castle of Heaven, John Eliot Gardiner writes with great insight about Bach’s grasp and musical depiction of the main theological themes of St John’s Gospel, which are deeply embedded within the structures of the music. For instance, the Gospel dwells extensively on the paradox at the heart of the doctrine of the Incarnation, that Jesus could be both God and human being, humbled from his high heavenly throne to come down as man, and then be raised on high again but only through the most degrading death imaginable, raised on the Cross. Note the use of a vertical dimension in the language.

Bach depicts this graphically in the open chorus: the orchestra sets a scene of foreboding with low rumbling strings suggesting foreboding and tension, while two oboes keen out in the minor key a lament full of weeping suspensions over the top. Yet when the choir comes in, it is with a confident and declamatory high-pitched major-key chord on the German word for ‘Lord’ (‘Hail’ in our translation) and a song of praise, and then a quieter descending section to depict Christ’s humbling. Bach clearly understood and could express St John’s intentions. This was absolutely ground-breaking and is partly why he remains one of the greatest composers of sacred music that ever lived.

What is the St John Passion ? Is it an opera?

No, it’s not an opera – that would have been completely unacceptable in church in those days. But it is a highly charged and dramatised account of the trials and other events that preceded and ended with Jesus’ death. The St John Passion alternates between sections of the drama and periods of reflection, with choir and soloists switching between their dramatic roles in Jesus’ downfall, and then voicing the feelings and thoughts of the repentant Christian church and its members, allowing the listeners to meditate.

The drama is told in music that is astonishing in its power to depict but also to trigger emotions. Listen out in the scene about Peter for the cock crow on the cello, for how cold it was, and for the distress in Peter’s weeping. Listen too, in part two, for the brutality of Jesus’ scourging, and for the rising levels of tension, threat, and intimidation as the mob sets about Pilate.

Reflection and meditation come in two forms: the arias sung by soloists, and the chorales. Note how each aria, so carefully placed in the narrative, helps the listener respond and leads them on emotionally to the next stage in the story, whether it be theological meditation, a call to action, or just the expression of raw emotion.

Note too how Bach uses three arias after the death of Christ to pilot his listeners back down emotionally, first through theological reassurance then pure sadness to the elegiac dance of the final Chorus – Sleep well.

The chorales – hymns which would have been well-known and sung by the whole congregation – are contemplative and mostly restful. They must have given the congregation a brief moment to find their bearings amongst all the new musical ideas assailing them. But only to a degree – Bach had completely transformed the old tunes with his ground-breaking harmonisations. Singing them must have felt so different!

How have people reacted to the St John Passion ?

The reaction to the first performance was mixed to say the least, particularly from the authorities, and Bach was forced to make a number of revisions the following year, returning to the original version only, but significantly, in the last two years of his life.

The St John Passion has been quite slow to emerge from the shadow of the monumental St Matthew Passion, taking a while for twentieth-century period-specialist performers to peel away the layers of inappropriate performance practice and so reveal the full extent of Bach’s  thought, insight and ambition in planning its structure.

But it is now acknowledged as a masterpiece, and it gives us huge pride and joy to bring it to you.

With thanks and due acknowledgement to Sir John Eliot Gardiner for an inspiring read in his portrait of JS Bach Music in the castle of Heaven, on which this article extensively relies.

Mystic Harmonies

a cappella choral music from three great eras

18 May 2024 @ 7:30 pm 9:00 pm

St John’s, Sharow nr Ripon HG4 5BJ

£10 Free FTE/U18 available on-line (see below) or at the door
Orange and blue light poring through a church window with the words Mystic Harmonies

Sung in the superb acoustics of St. John’s Sharow, this concert showcases some beautiful and varied a cappella choral music from three eras and spanning nearly five hundred years.

You can hear works from the Renaissance by John Sheppard, Robert Parsons, and an Italian nun called Raffaella Aleotti.

You can lose yourself in the sublime romantic harmonies of Anton Bruckner and Hubert Parry.

And you can get a taste of what brilliant choral music written today sounds like, with works by Ola Gjeilo, Caroline Shaw and our own Matthew Oglesby.

There is something here for everyone. If you’ve not yet discovered the joys of choral music, this would be a great place to start!

The concert will last about 90 minutes, including an interval during which wine and juice will be served.

St Peter’s Singers

Alexander Woodrow conductor

Ave MariaRobert Parsons
Vidi speciosamRaffaella Aleotti
The Lords PrayerJohn Sheppard
In PaceJohn Sheppard
Ave MariaAnton Bruckner
Virga JesseAnton Bruckner
Locus isteAnton Bruckner
Christus factus estAnton Bruckner
My Soul, there is a country far beyond the starsHubert Parry
I know my soul hath powerHubert Parry
Never weather-beaten sailHubert Parry
There is an old beliefHubert Parry
And the SwallowCaroline Shaw
Picking Fruit on the Feast of the TransfigurationMatthew Oglesby
Ubi caritasOla Gjeilo

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

St John Passion

29 March 2024 @ 7:00 pm 9:30 pm

Leeds Minster

JS Bach’s peerless music retells the story of the death of Jesus Christ.

£20 Free for U18s and Full Time Students

St John Passion

JS Bach

First performed 300 years ago on Good Friday 1724, Bach’s St John Passion sets to music St John’s account of the events leading up to Christ’s death. Even now it remains an acknowledged masterpiece, performed hundreds of times each year all over the world.

What is the St John Passion ?

It is at times highly dramatic, turbulent and emotional, while soothing, reflective, grief-stricken at others. The choir switches roles between the mob calling for Jesus’ death and the Christian community throughout the ages observing and reliving the horror of those events. The soloists too act out the parts of the main characters while giving voice to the thoughts and feelings of bystanders such as ourselves.

As ever, Bach’s music touches knowingly on our deepest and most complex emotions: love, betrayal, guilt, grief. Despite coming from what seems like another world, this work can still speak to us – moving, fulfilling and uplifting. Step into that world – and find yourself more truly and deeply present in this one.

The concert will finish at about 9.15pm. Tea and coffee will be served during the interval.

Toby Ward Evangelist

Phil Wilcox Christus

Colette Howarth, Heather Pennwood, Constanze Hartley, Joanna Shiels, Peter Condry
Christopher Trenholme, Scott Pennwood, Quentin Brown

St Peter’s Singers

National Festival Orchestra leader Sally Robinson

Shaun Turnbull continuo

Alex Woodrow Conductor

Toby Ward, Evangelist (Narrator), hails from Otley and started his musical life as a boy chorister at Leeds Parish Church (as Leeds Minster then was).

He then progressed via a Choral Scholarship at Gloucester Cathedral to a Tenor Choral Scholarship in the world-famous choir of Kings College, Cambridge, and then to the Royal College of Music.

He founded and directs the acclaimed early music group Ensemble Pro Victoria, and divides the rest of his professional time between singing, work as an organist and continuo player, and leading outreach workshops with young singers.

photo: Nick Rutter

Phil Wilcox, Christus, is well-known in West Yorkshire, having studied at Leeds Conservatoire, sung in the Bradford Cathedral Choir and St Peter’s Singers, and worked in many schools.

Following further studies at the Royal Academy, Phil has developed a wide and varied work portfolio, singing Oratorio, Opera for companies including English Touring Opera and Grange Park Opera, and as a chorister for Opera North and the BBC Singers.

Phil is very proud of his continuing outreach work as Learning and Participation Manager for Leeds Lieder, and he conducts a number of choirs for Music in the Office. He is a regular performer on the UK ceilidh scene playing the bass guitar and piano accordion.

photo: Matt Jones

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 than 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

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

Accessibility: 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 nave and to the City of Leeds Room for refreshments and toilets.

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

To hear the angels sing!

9 December 2023 @ 7:30 pm 9:30 pm

A feast of Carols and Christmas Music

£10 Free to U18 and Full time students

Join St Peter’s Singers in the beautiful church of St John’s Baildon for an evening of festive choral music for Christmas, with Carols for all to sing!

The programme will include traditional carols and carol arrangements by the likes of Holst and Willcocks, together with one or two stunningly beautiful works by living composers.

Mulled wine and mince pies will be served

The perfect way to start your Christmas celebrations!

Programme

Sussex Caroltrad. arranged Philip Ledger
I saw three shipstrad. arranged Simon Lindley
O Come all ye faithfularranged David Willcocks
The Angel Gabrieltrad. Basque, arranged Edgar Pettman
A Babe is bornWilliam Mathias
Calypso CarolJohn Bertalot
Away in a Mangerarranged David Willcocks
There is no roseCecilia McDowall
Interval
Bethlehem DownPeter Warlock
O magnum mysteriumMorten Lauridsen
God rest ye merry, gentlementrad. arranged David Willcocks
Sing Lullabytrad. Basque, arranged Edgar Pettman
The Shepherds Farewell Hector Belioz
Hark, the herald angels singFelix Mendelssohn arranged David Willcocks
Christmas DayGustav Holst

St Peter’s Singers

Shaun Turnbull organ

Alexander Woodrow conductor

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

Songs of Serenity and Peace

30 October 2023 @ 1:15 pm 2:15 pm

Spiritual music for choir and organ from around the British Isles

Free Free Admission

St. Anne’s Cathedral, Cookridge St, LS2 8BE

1.15pm, free admission

This programme of music for Choir and Organ starts in joyful and upbeat mood. It then transitions through expressions of both inward and outward turbulence to that sense of serenity and peace which maybe only music can invoke. A spiritual oasis during the working day!

The concert will last about 50 minutes.

Programme

O Sing unto the LordJames MacMillan
Let the people praise thee O GodWilliam Mathias
For lo, I raise upCharles Villiers Stanford
Nunc DimittisGustav Holst
Like as the hart desireth the waterbrooksHerbert Howells
Lo, the full final sacrificeGerald Finzi

St Peter’s Singers

Lee Ward organ

Alexander Woodrow Conductor

This programme draws on music from all four corners of the British Isles (Stanford’s anthem being composed in Dublin in 1914, although not published until 1939). MacMillan and Mathias, Scottish and Welsh respectively, set Psalm texts in upbeat and joyful mood. Stanford’s extraordinary setting of the prophet Habbakuk invokes the turbulence and upheaval brought by men of war before finding his way – via every choirboy’s favourite solo line ‘I will stand upon my watch’ – to a vision of serene hope. Howells’ and Holst’s works express that longing of the soul for inner peace, a theme developed and expressed in more florid language by Richard Crashaw, a poet in the Metaphysical tradition of John Donne and Thomas Traherne. As with so many English poets, Finzi demonstrates his extraordinary feel for this text, while the final ‘Amen’ won a recent light-hearted vote on Twitter for the best musical setting of the word…

This concert if promoted and provided free of charge by Leeds Leisure Services as part of the International Concert Season. St Peter’s Singers are grateful for the invitation to take part.

Leeds Intenrational Concert Season logo

Leeds International Concert Season

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St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

Elizabethan Jewels

24 June 2023 @ 7:30 pm 9:00 pm

£12 Free FTE/U18; available on-line (see below) or at the door

Choral Masterpieces from the Renaissance and the Modern Day

Leeds Minster June 24 7.30 pm

Please note this programme will be repeated on July 1 at St John’s Church, Sharow nr Ripon. For tickets and details of that event, please click here.

This beautiful programme of choral masterpieces mixes and matches exquisite music from the times of the two Queens Elizabeth, two golden eras of British choral music.

You will be able to hear works by the great William Byrd – who died 400 years ago this July – his friend Thomas Tallis, and their Spanish counterparts Victoria, Guerrero and Lobo.

And you can compare and contrast them with some of the most recent and stunning additions to our amazing British choral tradition – works by living composers Judith Weir, Cecilia McDowall and James MacMillan.

Or you can just sit, soak it up and revel in its sheer beauty!

The concert will last about 1.5 hours including an interval, during which refreshments will be served.

Set in the stunning surroundings of Leeds Minster, this concert is not to be missed!

Programme

To include:

Sing joyfullyWilliam Byrd
Gloria from Mass for 5 voicesWilliam Byrd
Laudate DominumFrancisco Guerrero
O Lord, make thy servant ElizabethWilliam Byrd
I love all beauteous thingsJudith Weir
Who shall separate usJames MacMillan
Sanctus and Benedictus
 from Mass for 5 voices
William Byrd
O nata luxThomas Tallis
Interval
O Radiant DawnJames MacMillan
Vidi speciosamTomas Luis de Victoria
There is no rose of such vertuCecilia McDowall
Versa est in luctumAlonso Lobo
Agnus Dei from Mass for 5 voicesWilliam Byrd
Emendemus in meliusWilliam Byrd
Faire is the heavenWilliam Harris

There will be an interval during which refreshments will be served

St Peter’s Singers

Alexander Woodrow conductor

Please note this programme will be repeated on July 1 at St John’s Church, Sharow nr Ripon HG4 5BJ

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

Music for Good Friday: Penthos

7 April 2023 @ 7:00 pm 8:00 pm

Book now

A new Requiem

The second performance of this visionary new work

created and first performed in Leeds in 2018

Penthos is a work for Choir, Orchestra, Organ and Soloists that combines high-quality music and poetry, and lasts nearly an hour.

It takes the form of the traditional Requiem Mass, but with new words exploring themes of reconciliation and forgiveness, and music that reaches beyond the words to speak to – and affirm – our deepest human longings.

“Put quite simply, it is a work of depth, maturity, power, beauty and sheer brilliance, whose qualities are revealing themselves week by week in rehearsal.”

Alex Woodrow, Conductor, St Peter’s Singers

“So it is locally written and locally performed, but trust me it will sound to you as if it has existed as a core of choral music for centuries. It is that good.”

Richard Pascoe, Member of St Peter’s Singers
Hannah Stone and Matthew Oglesby, creators of Penthos, set against a background of St Peter's Singers in concert

“A striking quality of the auspicious premiere … was the communicative power of the Penthos Requiem to connect with the listener”

Geoffrey Mogridge on Penthos in The Wharfedale Observer

For those who were present, the first performance of Penthos in October 2018 was something they are unlikely to forget: Matthew Oglesby’s powerful music adding further imaginative and emotional depth to Hannah Stone’s visionary poetry.

The pandemic forced the postponement of the second performance, planned for April 2020, but we were determined that there should be another opportunity to hear this superb work.

If you couldn’t get to that first performance in 2018, or you would like to hear it again… this is your chance, not to be missed!

Hannah Stone and Matthew Oglesby live in or around Leeds. They are members of St Peter’s Singers and highly active in Leeds’ cultural life.

Find out more about Penthos

Programme

Penthos

Hannah Stone and Matthew Oglesby

St Peter’s Singers

Lucy Appleyard contralto

Quentin Brown bass

William Campbell organ

National Festival Orchestra

Sally Robinson leader

Alexander Woodrow conductor

St Peter’s Singers gratefully acknowledge the generous support of

The Liz and Terry Bramall Foundation

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 than 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
£15 Free FTE/U18 available on-line (see below) or at the door

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

Double Entendre!

Double entendre socmed final A - Double Entendre!

Double Entendre! Yes, we’re teaming up with the Leeds Guild Of Singers so you can hear two choirs for the price of one!

The idea, which has been on the table for quite a while due to the pandemic, is not to form an augmented chorus for some performance on a grand scale, but to offer a programme of music written for single choir, double choir and a number of variations in between. So you can experience the thrill of hearing all 70 voices singing together but also enjoy the contrasts of each choir singing on their own.

Double choir ? it’s not a new idea

The idea of two groups of singers singing to each other in dialogue is nearly as old as western music itself. It goes back to the practice of monastic communities, who would sit facing each other in a collegiate arrangement, and chant alternate verses of the Psalms to each other, thus originating what is known as antiphonal music. Even in plainsong it works like a conversation with a musical idea stated in the first half of the verse and the answer contained in the response.

Antiphonal writing is a feature of the early choral writing of the Venetian Giovanni Gabrieli (b c1554) and also of Heinrich Schütz (b 1585) and indeed continues to be used through to modern times – those who attended our concert in November (A Vision of Albion) may recall Stanford’s brilliant Motet Coelos ascendit hodie especially for its antiphonal writing.

Some composers have of course taken advantage of having choirs capable of singing in eight or more parts (two each of soprano, alto, tenor and bass) to create richer, symphonic textures with more colourful and complex harmonies. Parry’s There is an old belief, and indeed Vaughan Williams’ Mass in G Minor from that same concert are fine examples, with Vaughan Williams mixing antiphonal writing into it as well, and there are many more.

Programme

The programme for this concert includes a broad range of choral music ranging from the early German music of Schütz and Buxtehude through Romantic works by Mendelssohn, Rheinberger and Rachmaninoff to more modern works by Schnittke and Arvo Pärt. It illustrates the amazing creativity of these composers as they continually sought and found news ways to vary and develop the use of double choir resources.

The Motet Jauchzet dem Herrn by Heinrich Schütz (himself influenced by Gabrieli) shows antiphonal writing at its strongest with echo effects and great rhythmic drive as two four-part choirs of sopranos, altos, tenors and basses fling words and musical ideas back and forth between them, almost interrupting each other at times. By contrast, the Magnificat that was once attributed to Buxtehude finds a different way of varying the sounds and textures by switching from 5-part choral writing to solo voices or single-voice ensembles. And in his lyrical Motet Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlen, Mendelssohn provides a further variation, creating separate groups out of the upper and lower voices for antiphonal use.

Rachmaninoff’s Choral Concerto and Schnittke’s Three Sacred Hymns take us into Russian Orthodox tradition, where the desire to enrich the music of the liturgy while retaining the restriction to just a cappella choral resources led to the development of great dynamism and richness, exemplified in the Choral Concerto. Schnittke demonstrates both antiphonal writing and the concerted building of richer choral sound, with the two being combined in the third hymn. Arvo Pärt, by contrast, and possibly seeking to return to basics, achieves the opposite in his setting of the Magnificat: a spare, minimalist, almost glacial texture created through, not despite, a multiplicity of parts, and a reminder of the simple chant that lies deep in the heart of all liturgical music.

The concert reaches its climax with the opulent Mass in E flat (‘Cantus Missae’) by Joseph Rheinberger. This magnificent work boasts antiphonal writing reflecting all the glory of the Venetian tradition, while also displaying mastery of contrapuntal textures – the weaving together of many moving parts – bequeathed to him in the German tradition by Bach and Mendelssohn. With all 70 or so voices of the two choirs combined in the warm key of E flat major, this work will provide an uplifting end to the concert and a fine memory to take away.

Three sacred hymnsAlfred Schnittke
Denn er hat seinen Engeln befohlenFelix Mendelssohn
Jauchzet dem HerrnHeinrich Schütz
MagnificatDieterich Buxtehude
MagnificatArvo Pärt
Choral ConcertoSergei Rachmaninoff
Mass in E flat ‘Cantus Missae’Joseph Rheinberger

Venue

The concert takes place in the beautiful setting of Leeds Minster at 4pm on Saturday 11 February, and will last about an hour. Refreshments will be served.

Leeds Minster is a large and well-ventilated building offering plenty of space, as well as impressive architecture and ambience. Car parking is available on streets nearby, in the car park by the Palace Hotel, and in the NCP Markets Car Park.

To Hear the Angels Sing

A feast of Christmas carols and other heavenly music !

17 December 2022 @ 7:30 pm 9:30 pm

Selby Abbey YO8 4PU

£10 Free FTE/U18 available on-line (see below) or at the door

Set in the stunning surroundings of Selby’s beautiful Abbey, and laden with music celebrating the mystery as well as the joy of Christmas, this will be a concert to lighten the darkness and lift the gloom.

St Peter’s Singers bring a delightful programme of Christmas Music from across the ages, from the timeless glory of the Renaissance masters to the atmospheric carols of modern-day greats such as John Rutter, Will Todd, Benjamin Britten, Cecilia McDowall and Morten Lauridsen.

Truly a chance to hear the angels sing – and with mince pies and mulled wine on offer, the perfect way to start your festivities!

Programme

Sussex Carolarr Philip Ledger
Candlelight CarolJohn Rutter
O Magnum MysteriumTomas Luis da Victoria
HodieJan Sweelinck
There is no roseCecilia McDowall
Three Movements from ‘Ceremony of Carols’Benjamin Britten
Organ solo:
Fantasia on Christmas CarolRalph Vaughan Williams
Interval
Silent Nightarr David Houlder
O Magnum MysteriumFrancis Poulenc
My Lord has comeWill Todd
The LambJohn Tavener
Three Advent CarolsFrancis Jackson
O Magnum MysteriumMorten Lauridsen
Ding Dong Merrilyarr Mack Wilberg

plus carols for all to sing

St Peter’s Singers

Oliver Waterer organ

Alex Woodrow director

St Peter’s Singers

View Organiser Website

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website

A Vision of Albion

Vaughan Williams and the soul of English music

Leeds Minster LS2 7DJ

19 November 2022 @ 4:00 pm 5:15 pm

This celebration of Ralph Vaughan Williams’ choral music, given in honour of his 150th anniversary, explores some of the colours and sounds of what we now recognize as the greatest and most authentic voice of English music to emerge after the Great War.

The programme encompasses both folksong and some of his most sublime spiritual outpourings.

The concert will last about an hour and a half, including an interval, during which refreshments will be served.

Programme

Coelos ascendit hodieCharles Villiers Stanford
Justorum AnimaeCharles Villiers Stanford
Beati quorum viaCharles Villiers Stanford
There is an old beliefHubert Parry
O taste and seeRalph Vaughan Williams
O Clap your handsRalph Vaughan Williams
Mass in G MinorRalph Vaughan Williams
Interval
The Turtle DoveRalph Vaughan Williams
Linden LeaRalph Vaughan Williams
Reconciliation (from Dona nobis pacem)Ralph Vaughan Williams
Nunc dimittisGustav Holst
Lord, thou has been our refugeRalph Vaughan Williams

Vaughan Williams was a man of contradictions, not least as an agnostic with a profound sense and desire for the spiritual. He found his voice as he sought out, preserved and assimilated the folksongs of England, finding in them a simplicity of musical expression a world away from the music of Empire, and then transforming that material into profound high art, capable of speaking to and for a nation in a way his Edwardian predecessors no longer could.

Our programme showcases the influences of his teachers Parry and Stanford which he absorbed but gradually left behind. It includes some of his folksong arrangements, and some of his finest spiritual music – the Mass in G Minor, first performed 100 years ago almost to the day, and the anthem O God our help in ages past.

St Peter’s Singers

David Grealy – organ

Alexander Woodrow Director

£10 Free for U18 / FTE

St John’s Church, Sharow, Ripon

Berrygate Ln, Sharow
Ripon, North Yorkshire HG4 5BJ
View Venue Website