The 'Three Choirs Festival' is a music festival, held each August alternately at the cathedrals of
Hereford,
Gloucester and
Worcester in
England and originally featuring their three choirs, which remain central to the week-long programme. The large-scale choral repertoire is now performed by the Festival Chorus but the festival also features other major ensembles and international soloists. The
2007 festival took place in Gloucester from 4-12 August.
The festival is closely identified with the musical careers of British composers
Edward Elgar,
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and
Ralph Vaughan Williams. Elgar's ''
Enigma Variations'', which swept him to fame in
1899, and the oratorio ''
The Dream of Gerontius'', written for the
Birmingham Triennial Festival of
1900, were both performed in 2007, in celebration of the 150th anniversary of Elgar's birth. The 2007 festival also featured
Benjamin Britten's ''
War Requiem'' and
Mahler's ''Eighth Symphony'': two large-scale choral works dating from near the end of the lives of these two composers. The organists of the three cathedrals (who act as artistic director and festival conductor when it is their cathedral's turn to host the festival) are
Geraint Bowen (Hereford),
Andrew Nethsingha (Gloucester) and
Adrian Lucas (Worcester). In September 2007 Nethsingha moves to
St John's College, Cambridge as director of music, and will be succeeded at Gloucester in January 2008 by
Adrian Partington. The 2008 festival will take place in Worcester from Saturday 2 August to Saturday 9 August.
History
The festival, originally over 2 days in September, is probably one of the oldest in Europe. Publicity for it in
1719, addressed "Members of the yearly Musical Assembly in these parts". Its music obviously tended towards the ecclesiastical. In early gatherings,
Purcell's setting of the ''Te Deum'' and ''Jubilate'' was a regular part of the repertoire until
1784 and Handel dominated 18th century programmes with oratorios such as ''
Alexander's Feast'', ''
Samson'', ''
Judas Maccabaeus'' and ''
Messiah''. Haydn's ''
The Creation'' was heard first in the festival of
1800. From
1840,
Mendelssohn's ''
Elijah'' was performed every year until
1930.
The
19th century saw the introduction of
Rossini,
Mozart and
Beethoven and the festival's fortunes were enhanced by the arrival of the railways. However, these also brought crowds, a phenomenon not always pleasing to the church authorities although full seats uplifted the finances. In the 1870s, the festival was reduced to the three cathedral choirs, ending for a while the era of the visiting celebrity singer as a faction in the church sought to stress the "appropriate" nature of activities allowed in cathedrals. However the civil authorities took issue with the ecclesiastical and the festival revived. Interestingly, works by
J.S. Bach were not heard until the
1870s, soon to be followed by "local" composer Elgar, who began to be featured around the turn of the century and whose works dominated the festival for much of the
20th century as it shifted emphasis toward British musicians.
Parry's compositions were also performed regularly. His ''De Profundis'' was one of the earliest works to be commissioned especially for the festival and performed in
1891.
Delius in 1901 is another composer who introduced or conducted new works, with his ''Dance Rhapsody No.1''. Another was
Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose
Tallis Fantasia was premiered there in
1910, followed by ''Fantasia on Christmas Carols'' in
1912, after which he co-featured with Elgar as a central prop to the musical repertoire. Other names include
Holst,
Arthur Sullivan,
Herbert Howells,
Gerald Finzi,
Walton,
Bliss and
Britten and recently,
Lennox Berkeley,
John McCabe,
William Mathias,
Paul Patterson and
James MacMillan.
External links
★
Official festival website
★
A fuller history of the festival
★
Hereford Cathedral
★
Gloucester Cathedral
★
Worcester Cathedral
See also
★
List of music festivals in the United Kingdom