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Festival Eucharist

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Gloucester Cathedral

Contact Info

Gloucester Cathedral
College Green
Gloucester
Gloucestershire
GL1 2LX
Tel: +44 0845 652 1823
Website

 
 

Rubbra Missa Cantuariensis
Opus 59 for double choir. Edmund Rubbra (1901–1986) was a British composer who composed both instrumental and vocal works for soloists, chamber groups and full chorus and orchestra. Highly respected by fellow musicians, he was at the peak of his public popularity in the mid-20th century, his most well-known works being his eleven symphonies.

The Missa Cantuariensis written during the last years of the Second World War was the result of a conversation between the Reverend J .W. Poole, the then Precentor of Canterbury Cathedral, and the Cathedral Organist, Gerald Knight. The far-sighted Precentor wished to encourage musicians to write for the liturgy and realised (with great clarity) that it was essential for the Church itself to encourage new music. The Mass was first performed on 20th June 1946 in St Bartholomew the Great, Smithfield in London with the Sadler's Wells Chorus conducted by Alan Melville: it was first sung in Canterbury Cathedral on 20th July 1946 conducted by Gerald Knight and has remained a regular part of the repertoire.

Although he was composing at a time when many people wrote twelve-tone music, he decided not to compose in this style, instead devising his own distinctive method of composition. It is a measure of the high esteem in which Rubbra was held in the 1940s, that his Sinfonia Concertante and his song Morning Watch were played alongside such works as Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius, Kodaly’s Missa Brevis and Vaughan Williams’s Job, at the 1948 Three Choirs Festival.

Blatchly Motets
Mark Blatchly is presently director of choral music at Charterhouse Independent School in Surrey, following spells as organ scholar at St Paul’s Cathedral and Christ Church, Oxford, assistant organist at Gloucester Cathedral, and organist at St Edmundsbury Cathedral. As an eminent organist, Mark has made a number of recordings and given recitals in almost every cathedral in England.

Dates

Festival Eucharist 8 Aug 2010

Day Opening Times
Sunday 10:15 - 12:00

Road Directions

If you are driving, Gloucester may be reached from junctions 11, 11A and 12 of the M5 and is signposted from junction 15 on the M4. It is on the A38, A40 and A417. Follow the signs to city centre. You can park in various car parks. Walk to the city centre's cross, take Westgate Street, proceed to down the street and the Cathedral is on the right hand side.

Public Transport Directions

10-15 minute walk from the bus and train station. Walk to the city centre's cross, take Westgate Street, proceed down the street and the Cathedral is on the right hand side.

 Facilities

Provider Preferences

  • In town/city centre
  • Indoor Event

Accessibility

  • Booking Advised
  • All Areas Accessible to Disabled Visitors
  • Facilities for Hearing Impaired Visitors
  • Facilities for Visually Impaired Visitors
  • Parking Areas for Disabled Visitors
  • Ramp/Level Access
  • Toilets for Disabled Visitors

Parking & Transport

  • Parking (charge)

Catering

  • On-Site café/restaurant - There is a cafe open all day serving drinks, pastries and sandwiches

Establishment Features

  • Accept coach parties
  • Cater for groups
  • Conference facilities
  • Toilets

Tours and Demonstrations

  • Guided Tours Available for Groups
  • Guided Tours Available for Individuals

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