Light Music 

The Light Music Years

How reflections on a jazzed-up mass led to something new...

Before the Cambridge University student society ever existed, a group of musicians, two of whom were Cambridge chaplains, had the vision to revitalise the way music was used in church services, seeking to bring in more contemporary forms based on folk and jazz idioms.  The group was known as the 20th Century Church Light Music Group.  Members of this group published numerous hymns and tunes in the early 1960s. 

The first C20th Hymn collection, 1960.

1950s: 20th Century Church Light Music Group

John Lockley, composer, piano and occasional bass, 1968-72 recalls:

I am not completely sure of the origin of 20th Century (the Cambridge University student society).  Certainly there was a national movement concerned with putting modern music into churches: the man most associated with this is Geoffrey Beaumont. I believe that he began the 20th Century Church Light Music Group and wrote various songs and hymns, including a modern setting of the Mass.

According to various Internet sources (Raymond Glover, Talmage Dean, Harry Eskew, Hugh McElrath, Simon Parry and the Church Times), published variously 1980-2018:

The 20th Century Church Light Music Group was set up at the end of the 1950s by a number of British musicians who felt that church music was increasingly out of touch with modern society.  These included Geoffrey Beaumont, Patrick Appleford, Gordon Hartless and Michael Brierley. According to Appleford, they sought "a musical lingua franca or folk music in the sense of ordinary folk’s music rather than that of the pop music industry".  The group published numerous hymns and recordings between 1960 and 1965, and had a significant influence on church music.

Geoffrey Beaumont and musical collaborators.

Geoffrey Beaumont (1903 - 1970) was an Anglican priest and composer.   He trained at Ely Theological College and was ordained in 1932 to a curacy in Nunhead.  During the war he served as a chaplain in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, for which he was awarded the MBE.  From 1947 to 1952 he was chaplain of Trinity College, Cambridge.

With Patrick Appleford, Beaumont founded the 20th Century Church Light Music Group and edited a number of collections of new hymns and songs.  Among his own compositions included:

In 1961, he became a monk, entering the Community of the Resurrection.

Patrick Appleford.

Patrick Appleford (1925 - 2018) found his vocation at Trinity College, Cambridge, where Geoffrey Beaumont was his chaplain.  He studied for the ministry at Chichester and served his first curacy at All Saints Poplar, in the East End of London from 1952-58 (Poplar is featured in the BBC TV series Call the Midwife).  There he wrote pantomimes for the youth club and his first hymns.  

With Beaumont, he founded the 20th Century Church Light Music Group and edited a number of collections of new hymns and songs, many of which found their way into hymn books around the world and are still sung frequently today.  Applefords' original compositions include:

He served in many pastoral roles in the UK and Zambia, eventually as Canon of Chelmsford Cathedral (1978–90).

A later C20th Hymn collection, 1966.

1960s:  Patrick Appleford and Acker Bilk

Richard Norman, a chorister in the 1960s, recalls:

I was a chorister in St. Giles Camberwell during the 50s, and 60s and a member of the St. Giles Youth Club during the early 60s.  Around this time, Rev. Pat Appleford came to live in the ground floor front room of the then St. Gile's Vicarage.  He was involved with the Youth Club, which met in the other ground floor room opposite, and we, the youth, would often migrate into his room where he would play his piano to us and we would sing.  He would put up a newspaper article, or any other item that he wanted to illustrate musically, play a metrical psalm tune and sing the article as a psalm!

We knew that he and Geoffrey Beaumont were in something called the 20th Century Church Light Music Group and Geoffrey's Mass and Pat's hymns were then very much in vogue and being sung in St. Giles.  During this time I believe that he persuaded Acker Bilk to come and play at one of the St. Giles fund raising fêtes.  I attended the Bilk crowd in Pat's room, meeting Mrs Bilk (Jean), all the members of his band and their various wives and girlfriends.  At this time, his famous tune Stranger on the Shore was in the top ten; and since this was released in 1961, I think this event happened at around the same time.

Pat had left St. Giles by around 1964.  The last I knew of Pat was after he came back from Africa, when he wound up in Suffolk (I think) and did some work in 2013-14 for Chelmsford Cathedral.  He wrote a celebratory hymn, entitled Jesu Redeemer You Set Us Free, to mark the centenary both of the Diocese of Chelmsford and the dedication of the cathedral.

The tune Flem(m)ing Way, in the 1966 collection.

Michael Kemp, a composer in the 1960s, recalls:

My involvement came as the result of a friendship with the son of Josef Weinberger's then publishing manager, William Foss.  His son, also named William (but known as Bill) invited me to stay at the family home at Hove.  He knew I had had a go at composing some modern style hymn tunes after hearing Beaumont's tune to Now Thank We All Our God and Malcolm Williamson's Procession of Palms.  So I went duly armed with the manuscripts of what I thought were the best three.  William Foss (senior) seemed impressed and invited me to submit them for publication, explaining that the 20th Century group were in the throes of compiling a new collection (this was in 1963).

To cut a long story short, Patrick Appleford kindly decided to include one of my tunes in the 1966 collection Twenty-One 20th Century Hymns.  This tune was a setting for the hymn He is Risen, He is Risen by Mrs C. F. Alexander.   I gave it the name Fleming Way, after the road in Crawley, West Sussex, where I was working at the time.  When published, it was spelled incorrectly as:  Flemming Way!   So far as I know it has never been recorded and has rarely been used in services.  My all too brief association with 20th Century was solely through Patrick Appleford, so I can only presume this was the original group.  How or when this later became, or was absorbed into, the Cambridge student society, I simply have no idea.

Michael Lehr, the founder of Reflection.

1963:  Jazz at Great St Mary's?

By the early 1960s there was definitely a Cambridge University student society of the same name in existence, the direct successor to Beaumont and Appleford's society.

Michael Lehr, guitar and composer 1963-65, and founder of Reflection, recalls:

When I joined the Cambridge 20th Century Church Light Music Group towards the end of my first year (1963) it was very much part of Great St Mary's church activities, really just an occasional choir using mainly the music published by Josef Weinberger.  I happened to walk in on a communion service they were doing, using Patrick Appleford's Mass of Five Melodies, backed by the University's Traditional Jazz Band.

I hated the music, but was intrigued by the possibilities, as my musical life at the time was totally divided between the first of many university rock bands, The Golden Blades, and singing in Jesus Chapel Choir (although I was an undergraduate at Trinity). I wanted to see if I could unite the two sides of my music, and so I joined the group and wrote my own guitar-based setting of the then communion service, A Mass Of Saints And Sinners, which was used over several years. It was actually published by Weinberger and recorded (I suspect rather badly) and is now best forgotten!  The then archaic language of the liturgy just didn't work at all in a rock setting, although the music was okay, and the Vicar, Canon Hugh Montefiore, was well pleased with the result, since it got bums-on-pews for the church services!

A Folk Passion, 1972.

1966:  Reflection Records

Michael Lehr, guitar and composer 1963-65, and founder of Reflection, recalls:

I was just the first of an influx of many new members arriving in the following years (led by Richard Spence, another guitarist) and with the combination of musicians joining 20th Century, we were able to form a proper contemporary musical group.  We even gained our first talented lyricist in Paul Merchant, and started to write some original hymns and songs.  Further members joined over the following years, including John Lockley, who, with Mike Colley, was later to create the group's famous folk-rock oratorio A Folk Passion.  Although I graduated in 1965, I continued to be involved with 20th Century over the next few years.

The year after I had left Cambridge (1966), I rejoined the group for a long weekend trip to the Anglican chaplaincy in Brussels, where I met some of the then current members.  That's when the idea of Reflection was born, as we wanted to carry on the kind of work that 20th Century had started.  Reflection would be a Christian music recording and publishing partnership, devoted to contemporary musical styles.  Several members of 20th Century, including John Lockley, Michael Clements and Andy Knight, stayed involved with us for several years, long after they had graduated, and participated in other Reflection activities, but the others went their own ways (mostly because of their greater distance from the Home Counties, where we tended to be based).

The Present Tense, 1968.

The first record we released was called The Present Tense and featured a number of Reflection musicians and singers, playing the songs of Sydney Carter.  We later recorded and published many other albums, including A Folk Passion, released in 1972.  The company was to continue for a good many years, and had its own website, Reflection Christian Music.  Although Reflection formally ceased trading in the late 1990s, we still keep good contact with all our former members, and meet for one reason or another several times a year.

Editor's Note:  Unfortunately, the Reflection website is no longer securely maintained.  Michael Lehr passed into glory during the night of 27 March, 2010, after a significant illness. He wil be greatly missed.