ALL SAINTS MARGARET STREET

All Saints, Margaret Street, London, W1W 8JG, UK
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Music

Introduction | The organ | An introduction to the music at All Saints


Introduction

Painted Organ Pipes (South Chancel)Music plays an integral part in worship at All Saints, just as it has done within worship since the earliest centuries of the Christian church. The principal musical services are High Mass, on Sundays at 11am, and on Holy Days during the week at 6.30pm, while Evensong and Benediction are sung every Sunday evening at 6pm. The following pages introduce music at All Saints, and provide a background to some of its uses.

Click here for the All Saints Music Diary.

Music at All Saints

Organists have included Richard Redhead, the first organist and remembered today as the composer of Rock of Ages and Bright the Vision, Walter Vale (1907-1939), William Lloyd Webber (1939-1948), John Birch (1953-58) and Michael Fleming (1958-68), many of whom wrote music for use at All Saints and beyond. All Saints also has an important link to Rachmaninov: Vale arranged Rachmaninov's Mass with English words, which the composer came to hear twice, in 1915 and 1923, declaring himself pleased with the result. It is still sung on Palm Sunday.

Looking down on the choirA choir school was established at the church in 1843, which provided music for daily choral services. The choir was widely recognised for its excellence, and choristers sang at the coronations of Edward VII, George V and VI, and Elisabeth II, as well as at Victoria's Jubilees. Among its alumni was Laurence Olivier. The school closed in 1968, at which point the boy's voices were replaced by sopranos. The present-day choir maintains the exacting standards of its predecessors, and is now led by the Organist and Director of Music Paul Brough.

Please visit the online shop for CD's recorded by All Saints Margaret Street choir, and to listen to some sound samples

Click here for details of the Choir & Music Trust

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