Wednesday 21 September
All are welcome to join us for our next evening organ recital with our very own Director of Music, Adrian Partington.
Click here to view the live streamAdrian has been Director of Music at Gloucester since January 2008. During his years here, he has introduced Girl Choristers to the Cathedral Choir, has taken the choir to sing in the U.S.A., Canada, South Africa and Sweden, and has made several CDs, most recently the Church Music of Ian King, in June 2021. In May 2019, he took the Choristers to sing with the Berlin Philharmonic at the Philharmonie in Berlin.
The programme will include:
J. S. Bach Prelude and Fugue in D minor ‘The Dorian’
Merkel Allegretto and Allegro
Franck Choral No. 2 in B minor
Saint-Saëns Fantaisie in E flat major
Lennon and McCartney, arr. Paul Ayres Recitative on ‘Yesterday’
Parry Fantasia and Fugue in G major
The recital will begin at 7.30pm, and admission is free with a retiring collection in aid of Cathedral music. This service will also be live-streamed so that you can join us from wherever you are in the world.
We ask that you register your attendance in advance by clicking on the 'book' button to the right of this page. This is to help us in managing numbers, but walk-ups will also be welcome on the day.
Please find below an update from our Director of Music, Adrian Partington, regarding the Gloucester Cathedral organ.
Few cathedral and church organs in the United Kingdom have a pair of organ cases to match the two we have here at Gloucester Cathedral. The “Great Case” dates from around 1666; the smaller case, the “Chaire Case” dates from at least fifty years earlier than that. These cases weren’t always placed where they are now; but since 1718, they have stood proudly in their current position, and have housed several different sets of pipes during the past three hundred years.
Organ pipes and mechanisms wear out after a time, simply from heavy use; and the Gloucester Cathedral organ has had to have several radical rebuilds since it arrived in its present position. The principal, more recent rebuilds have occurred in 1847 (Henry Willis), 1888 (Henry Willis), 1920 (Harrison and Harrison), and 1970 (Hill, Norman and Beard). Apart from some minor changes and repairs undertaken in 1998 by Nicholsons of Malvern, the instrument from 1970/71 gave valiant service for just over fifty years.
It, too, has now failed, as all its predecessors eventually did. In the past few years, some of the pipework has become unusable; but more fundamentally, earlier this year, the transmission , which has been temperamental for some months, ceased to function completely.
Since March, the famous organ of Gloucester Cathedral has been silent, and, without a total restoration, will not speak again. The Chapter , anticipating a cathedral organ crisis, began in 2018 to prepare for a rebuild. Various inspections and studies have since been carried out, and several different schemes for a renovation have been discussed .
A contract has been signed with organ specialists Nicholson & Co, who have successfully cared for the instrument for over twenty years, to refurbish the organ, with work due to commence in 2024. While we wait for the organ to be rebuilt, we are grateful to Mr. Paul Vaughan for the loan to us of an excellent “digital” organ, which is the instrument which currently accompanies all the services in the Cathedral. We're currently experimenting with the virtual pipe organ software Hauptwerk, using sounds from the organ at Hereford Cathedral. We think it sounds almost as good as it does down the road!
- Type
- Music
- Dates
- September 21, 2022
- Opening times
- Wednesday 21 September 7.30pm-8.45pm
- Location
- Quire 12 College GreenGloucesterGL1 2LX
- Book Now