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Blackburn Cathedral - February 2026
Blackburn Cathedral is an inspiring space for musical performance. The acoustic sound is amazing. As a visiting choir, we were warmly greeted by both staff and clergy.
It has a lively programme of music throughout the year and we were proud to be asked to sing the Eucharist and Evensong. As you stand in the Choir Stalls, the Crown of Thorns high above you reminds you of the suffering of Jesus, the season of Lent leading up to a glorious Easter-Tide.
John Naylor our Music Director had chosen for us a challenging but delightful programme and we arose to that challenge as reinforced by positive feedback. We were supported by Willow Northeald at the organ who delivered wonderful voluntaries.
Our accommodation for the weekend was comfortable and enjoyable. It was a very happy time where friendships and camaraderie were renewed, but most of all singing a beautiful programme of liturgical music and striving to produce a polished sound.
“In the Name of Music I shall sing, I shall sing”
Deborah Sumner
Lincoln Cathedral - April 2026
Once again, we arrive for a weekend with the OUCC, this time in Lincoln. Seeing the Cathedral from a distance, then seeing it on the signposts, and entering the city we start spotting our fellow choristers as we get close to the hotel. All confirmation that the weekend is here after all that practising.
We found the Lincoln Hotel to be very welcoming – with a letter accompanying our keycards. Despite the fact that most of us are old enough to remember what letters are, several of us failed the ‘initiative test’ of reading it before attempting to fill in the registration card with its cryptic ‘breakfast’ question and trying to find a wi-fi code by such methods as asking the reception staff who gently referred us to the letter (while answering the question politely if a trifle resignedly!). As we were to find the staff were very helpful and attentive.
Once we had done a circuit round the outside of the cathedral to find the way in, we did another one round the cloister to find the hidden door to the Catherine Wickham (rehearsal) room. Rather fewer stairs to access it than the official song-school, but we filled it to capacity, to the extent that we did not do much practice standing up, but waited for the practises in the choir stalls. Mind you, despite John’s dire anecdote about one visiting choir being sent home in disgrace before they had completed their services, we must have been doing something right as we were given Saturday morning off.
Although the practice room had something of a lacklustre piano, (there were other descriptions, but we don’t want our wonderful hosts to be offended) it was graced by Willow, so we felt we would be in safe hands. Although we had our traditional practice on arrival, it feels as if work really begins on Friday, and we were grateful that Pam had brought special cake to fortify us.
The Friday evensong was based around plainsong responses and psalm, complemented by William Byrd’s second service and an anonymous 16th c Motet ‘Rejoice in the Lord alway’, which was not as hard as it seemed at first, and very suitable for Eastertide.
Plainsong is a bit of a challenge for some of us – who, if you are like me, nervously look through the words of the psalm when it arrives in the inbox, thinking ‘should I or should I not practise it, in case I get the wrong interpretation stuck in my head?’ and make some attempt to familiarise myself with the words and general shape.
And then there was the glorious Easter Office hymn, with two tunes. One of which was ‘normal’ and one which had had a quasi-plainsong rhythm. It took a while to grasp the esoteric system of fitting the words to the notes, with some lines leaving us with rather more notes than we quite knew what to do with……… Fortunately, the warm and friendly Succentor explained that it was his responsibility to sing some of the verses, and the starred ones were already missed out… so that reduced the opportunities for error somewhat!
It was exciting to sing Byrd’s Second Service in a place where there is such a strong connection with the composer and there was a memorial stone in the quire floor for him as well as a facsimile of one of his part-books in the cathedral’s Exhibition gallery. We didn’t hear him turning in his grave after we had sung. I do hope that was not only because the stone was not actually over his grave, which is somewhere else entirely:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9927927/william-byrd
The ins and outs of processing can be a minefield for a visiting choir, and although we were actually in the same location and formation for all the services, we did have a slight expansion of numbers for Saturday and Sunday which affects lining up. It also increased the number of basses by 50% to an unholy trinity (sorry for that Charles, David and Derek, you are actually wonderful), as well as some further ladies to fit into the wee-boy-chorister-sized choir stalls. But perhaps we will get braver in not actually trying to dodge mines (of which there are not so many in our cathedrals) and keep to closer to the ideal of straight lines.
I hope John felt that the Saturday morning helped to keep our voices fresh for Colin’s wonderful canticles in the evening, and the allotted Psalm verses to 3 chants. We also had two joyful Easter anthems for Saturday and Sunday evensongs, as well as the Rutter ‘Christiana canticles’ on Sunday.
There was certainly a lot of fresh air in Lincoln. I believe I heard somewhere that it comes straight across from Siberia, that may be apocryphal, but there were certainly a few blasts of cold air that made it into the Cathedral. Rain had threatened to spoil our free time for a bit, but in fact it mostly held off, so that there was a nice opportunity for some of us to see the historic city. Apart from the cathedral, it offers its castle, museums and art galleries, find some Lincoln plum bread or just test our mettle on the famous ‘Steep Hill’ and live to tell the tale.
Within the Cathedral itself, we were warned to allow extra time as it has the largest area of any cathedral, and like on so many of our tours we have a sense of privilege and to be exploring it from the inside. It had a lovely cloister and a deeply resonant bell chiming the hour. It houses the moving wood sculptures, ‘Forest Stations of the Cross’ by William Fairbank, around the walls. I also loved the ‘Gilbert Pots’ – large ceramic candle holders that I later found out were meant to represent nuns and monks of a local monastic order founded by St Gilbert of Sempringham in Lincolnshire, that were fashioned by Robin Welch in honour of the 900th anniversary of St Gilbert in 1984. are
https://lincolncathedral.com/conservation-of-a-gilbert-pot/
The Eucharist on Sunday was also in the Quire, and although a few of us found the Darke in E a little high, the acoustic made the most of our voices, and we could enjoy the Mildinhall anthem – ‘Bread is blessed and broken’.
In the week after Easter it was good to enjoy the season of celebration with our choir friends and the Cathedral community and with special thanks to Ester and the team who make this all happen, I look forward to seeing you again before too long.
Gillian Hogg
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