Paul Carr: Four New Seasons
Jul
13
7:30 PM19:30

Paul Carr: Four New Seasons

Paul Carr is a living English composer who has written chamber music, concertos, and orchestral pieces, but is perhaps best known for his choral works. Requiem for an Angel was championed by Classic FM in 2011, Stabat Mater was commissioned and recorded by English Arts Chorale in 2017, and his more recent Ubi Caritas is fast becoming a favourite from a set of three religious texts for choir, orchestra, and different instrumental soloists.

On Saturday, 13th July, in Lord Pirbrights’s Hall, The Octavian Singers will perform his Four New Seasons, which is a reimagining of Antonio Vivaldi’s iconic work, and sets three poems for each of the seasons, alongside the accompaniment of the familiar Vivaldi music, provided for us by a pianist. Our audience will hear beautiful poetry by English and American writers such as A.E. Houseman, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Emily Brontë, and William Shakespeare in Carr’s original setting.

View Event →

From Shadow to Light
Mar
23
7:30 PM19:30

From Shadow to Light

Saturday, 23rd March 2024 will see The Octavian Singers take our audience on a musical journey from darkness into light. Our concert, hosted by St Mary of Bethany Church, will include music describing the night-time, including John Wilbye’s Draw on Sweet Night and Camille Saint-SaënsCalme Des Nuits, contrasted with the lighter themes of Eric Whitacre’s Lux Aurumque and James MacMillan’s O Radiant Dawn. Sacred music from the Vespers settings of Sergei Rachmaninov and Aleksandr Gretchaninov will sit alongside the secular celebrations depicted by Clara Schumann in Abendfeier in Venedig, written as a birthday gift to her husband Robert.

The Octavian Singers aim to sing music by a diverse range of composers, including minorities whose music has been historically underrepresented. We are therefore proud to present the works of female composers and composers of colour such as Sally Beamish, Fanny Hensel (née Mendelssohn), Florence Price, Undine Smith Moore, and Mark Butler in this concert.

We hope that our audience members will enjoy the atmosphere of change as we move from one musical period to another, through a diverse range of emotions.

View Event →
Christmas is here...!
Dec
16
6:00 PM18:00

Christmas is here...!

The Octavians Singers present a lighter programme of Christmas music at St Saviour’s Church, Brookwood. We invite you to relax with a drink as we work our way through a selection of seasonal favourites - and maybe even join in with a few!

Many thanks to our friends at St Saviours for partnering with us to make this concert freely accessible to all. The retiring collection will be split evenly between the church and the choir.

View Event →
The Genius of Byrd and Tallis
Nov
25
6:00 PM18:00

The Genius of Byrd and Tallis

This year marks the 400th anniversary of the death of English Tudor composer William Byrd. On Saturday, 25th November in All Saints, Woodham, The Octavian Singers will commemorate this milestone by performing his Mass for 4 Voices, as well as some other favourite anthems by him.

Although a staunch Roman Catholic, Byrd was a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I, and avoided most of the controversies surrounding others of his faith during the Reformation. He was even awarded the privilege of a monopoly on printing music in 1575, alongside his friend and colleague Thomas Tallis. Our concert will also include a selection of anthems by Tallis, alongside the first set of his Lamentations of Jeremiah - a particularly poignant text in our own politically turbulent times.

The presentation of our concert is inspired by the format of a church service, with anthems interwoven between the sections of the Mass, and will last about an hour with no interval. Refreshments will be served afterwards.

View Event →
Epiphany
Jan
8
4:00 PM16:00

Epiphany

The Octavian Singers, like most other choirs, have been singing lots of different carols for years but some don’t fit neatly into a pre-Christmas concert. Laura, their director, likes to extend her own celebrations for as long as she can get away with! So we decided to have a late season concert, and enjoy the other parts of the Christmas story that aren’t always included.

We will start with celebrating the reason for Christ’s birth in the carols Truth from above and Adam lay y-bounden then we will celebrate St Stephen’s Day with Good King Wenceslas, move through the flight into Egypt and the Massacre of the Innocents. New Year’s Day is then marked with a carol by Britten; we’ll finish the performance with the arrival of the Three Kings in pieces by Cornelius and Mendelssohn. There will be carols for all and some lovely poems, all accompanied by mulled wine and mince pies.

View Event →
The Mystery of Mary
Dec
3
7:30 PM19:30

The Mystery of Mary

December 3rd sees the Octavians return to Trinity Methodist Church for a concert entitled “The Mystery of Mary”. We’ll be singing several settings of the Ave Maria, which is probably the most well known prayer to the Blessed Virgin. However, there will be settings of other prayers which address her as Holy Queen or Mother of Mercy or Star of the Sea.

The composers featured range from the Baroque era through to the present day, and languages range through English, Latin, Italian and Old Church Slavonic! Some of the music will be very familiar, such as Rachmaninov Bogogroditse Dyevo (Ave Maria) from his Vespers, and solos by Caccini and Schubert. Other pieces have been performed by Octavians previously, such as Poulenc Salve Regina and Faure Maria Mater Gratiae.

We will also sing two settings of There is no rose of such virtue, one by Britten from the Ceremony of Carols and the other by Hampshire composer Martin Read. I sing of a maiden is the text chosen for a setting by another local 21st Century composer, Alison Willis. An atmospheric finale will be presented in the mesmeric music of Totus Tuus by Anton Gorecki, written for Pope John Paul II in June 1987.

View Event →
Bob Chilcott's Nidaros Jazz Mass
Jul
9
7:30 PM19:30

Bob Chilcott's Nidaros Jazz Mass

The Octavian Singers are excited to be performing again in Pirbright on 9th July. We will present a programme of jazzy pieces in two halves - the first focuses on the more spiritual side of jazz (arguably its roots), and the second half consists of the lighter side of this style.

The main piece is by Bob Chilcott, who was a member of the Kings Singers, and is now well known as a composer and arranger. The work is his Nidaros Jazz Mass, commissioned for the Nidaros Cathedral Girls' Choir in Trondheim, Norway, and first performed by them in 2012. The movements are as you’d expect with any setting of a missa brevis (that is, there's no Credo) and draw upon a variety of jazz styles, ranging from ballads to funky to passionate. We version we will perform has been arranged for full choir and piano.

The rest of the first half consists of Spirituals, both familiar and less well known, from slow and sombre (Deep River) to upbeat and lively (Ride On, Jesus, Ride). It is thought that the rhythms and style of spirituals are what eventually led to the development of jazz as a musical idiom - uneven quavers, added 6th notes in chords, call and response structures.

After the interval (during which refreshments will be served) we will move into the lighter side of traditional swing jazz with favourites such as Lullaby of Birdland, standards like Summertime, songs from musical theatre (Rhythm of Life), and into the 20th Century popular songs Java Jive and Only You. Our tenors and basses will also perform a couple of songs from the Yale Song Book of 1906.

We are very excited to welcome back Jonathan Rhodes-Smith to accompany us on the piano. Jonathan last performed with us in 2019, and it will be a pleasure to have him joining us once more.

The concert starts at 7.30pm and tickets are available through Eventbrite on our homepage.

View Event →
Breinton Presents: an outdoor garden concert with Connaught Brass in celebration of the Platinum Jubilee
May
14
3:30 PM15:30

Breinton Presents: an outdoor garden concert with Connaught Brass in celebration of the Platinum Jubilee

Aaron Akugbo, trumpet
Harry Plant, trumpet
Robyn Blair, horn
Chris Brewster, trombone
Aled Meredith-Barrett, tuba

Supported by local choir The Octavian Singers.

Covid is officially over and the mood is soaring. It is time for Spring at Breinton with a special event in celebration of Her Majesty the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

Our first outdoor event for 2022 will feature the freshest talent in chamber music, Connaught Brass. Vibrant, spirited, bold and already set to perform at London’s Wigmore Hall, they are on the threshold of a major international career. Let us hear their hand-picked repertoire, including works by Elgar, Rimsky-Korsakov and other British composers, and feel their ambition to bring brass chamber music to the forefront of modern classical music. And support local Woking talent, Chris Brewster on trombone on his return to Breinton as a professional musician.

To support the main act, we are delighted to present The Octavian Singers; this Woking-based community choir was established in 1987 and will entertain us with British-themed madrigals and light jazz.

Joyful voices and the majestic combination of trumpets, trombone, horn and tuba on a May afternoon; we look forward to welcoming everyone back to enjoy the music at Breinton.

Buy Tickets

View Event →
Women Composers: A Celebration
Mar
12
7:30 PM19:30

Women Composers: A Celebration

Despite being delayed by two years due to an unexpected pandemic, The Octavian Singers are delighted to present Women Composers: A Celebration - a collection of music by the underrepresented female composers from the Middle Ages to the present day.

March is the month which celebrates International Women’s Day. This isn’t one of those card-manufacturers’ attempts at making you buy a card and goodies for “someone special”. The earliest Women’s Day observance was 1909 in New York, followed by a conference in 1910, International Women’s Day in 1911 in central Europe, 1913 in Russia and a general consensus that it would be a good thing to fix the date as March 8th for everyone.

It wasn’t all about protests and demands for rights and votes as many of the events were marking the achievements of women. This is what our concert is about - we will be performing music written by women which has been neglected. Here, we we aim to introduce you to some of the women whose music we’ll be singing, in the hope that you might be tempted to hear their music!

The first group three composers are nuns who composed music to sing in their convents, and therefore never expected it to be heard outside their walls. Hildegard of Bingen lived from 1098 to 1179 and was a Benedictine nun in the Rhineland. She founded two convents and wrote many scriptural texts, including Ordo Virtutum, which is an early form of a morality play and from which one of our pieces is taken.

Sulpitia Cesis was born in Modena, Italy in 1577 and entered the Augustinian convent there, famous for its music, aged 16. The music she wrote was for performance by the nuns, even though it seems to have tenor and bass parts (these are most likely to have been played on instruments). We’ll be singing her Stabat Mater, a hymn for Lent.

Our third nun is Maria Xaveria Peruchona born around 1652 in the Italian town of Gozzano and who also entered a convent aged 16 - this Ursuline convent in Galliate allowed her to study music. She was of poor health and died around 1709. The piece we will sing is Cessate Tympana and is similar in style to works by Monteverdi.

Two of the composers featured have surnames we’re sure you’ll recognise, as they are related to well-known male musicians! The first of these is Fanny Hensel, who was born Fanny Mendelssohn and was the older sister of more famous Felix. Both studied music at a very early age as their mother had studied with Kirnberger who had himself studied with J S Bach. By age 13, Fanny could play all 48 preludes and fugues from the Well-Tempered Klavier of J S Bach. However, her father thought that although she excelled in music, it should only be a hobby for her, not a profession.

In 1827 she married a court painter, Wilhelm Hensel, and he was supportive of her continuing to perform and compose music despite being unmusical himself. From 1831 onwards, Fanny masterminded the series of concerts held in the Mendelssohn family home and occasionally appeared as a performer there. Her only known public performance was in 1838 when she played her brother’s piano concerto.

Fanny continued to compose and only in 1846 did she publish a set of songs under her own name. The pieces we will sing come from Gartenlieder which were published in 1847. Sadly, this was the year in which she died, following complications from a stroke. Her brother died only 6 months later.

The other composer we’d like to introduce is Clara Schumann, who was married to Robert Schumann. Clara had been born Wieck and had a prestigious concert career as a pianist from age 11, as her father was himself a professional musician and he was ambitious for her. In 1828, she met Robert after a performance, who was at that point studying law. Robert began to study music with Friedrich Wieck and asked permission to marry Clara, but was refused. The pair eventually sued her father, and were allowed to marry in 1840.Unfortunately, her music-making then took rather a back seat and she kept house and brought up 8 children while only dabbling in composition.

By 1854 Robert was suffering symptoms of syphilis and was admitted to an asylum, and her friends Joachim and Brahms encouraged her to play and compose again in earnest. From 1856 onwards Clara began touring as a concert pianist and continued her musical life for a further 30 years.

In 1878 she was appointed piano tutor to a new conservatoire in Frankfurt and was unsurprisingly the only woman on the faculty until she retired in 1892. She died in 1896. In our upcoming concert, we will perform a short round by Clara as well as two pieces written for a birthday party for Robert.

We will continue to add to this blurb in the weeks leading up to the concert - please subscribe to our mailing list to get new additions sent directly to your inbox!

View Event →
Noël
Nov
28
6:00 PM18:00

Noël

The Octavian Singers return to Brookwood for Noël, our light concert of Christmas music. Join us for a relaxed evening of free entertainment, with an optional retiring collection on the door, and bring a bottle or two with you!

View Event →