A fascinating programme of secular music reflecting on times and seasons. The never-ending pace of life has been an inspiration for composers and this programme will have a contemporary feel, with works reflecting the different moods that the changing of the year and the times of day produce. Works will range from the serious to the folkloric, and evoke the various moods which occur as day turns to night, and spring turns to summer and autumn.
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20 June 2026 7.30 pm
All Saints Clifton, 68 Pembroke Road, BS8 3ED
Tickets: £21 (reserved), £15 (unreserved), Students & under 18s £1
Further details and ticket sales will be available nearer the time.
Trinity-Henleaze United Reform Church, Waterford Road, BS9 4BT
Tickets : £21 (reserved), £15 (unreserved). Students & under 18s £5
further details and ticket sales will be available nearer the time.
This autumn will see a focus on the music of Bach, Brahms, and Bruckner, three very different composers but ones familiar to all music-lovers. Whilst all are known for their large-scale works, their output of choral music is no less masterly, and often seems to encapsulate an entire symphonic world in a short time span. The principal work will be J.S. Bach’s Motet Jesu Meine Freude, which across its 11 sections exploits the full gamut of choral writing. Brahms’ beautiful Op. 29 motets will be joined by his Fest- und Gedenksprüche and the secular Drei Gesange, whilst Bruckner’s beautiful Os Justi and majestic Ecce Sacerdos will provide a thrilling end to the concert.
Tickets: £21 (reserved), £15 (unreserved), £1 (students & under 18’s)
In Northern Lights on 21st June 2025 Bristol Bach Choir will present a programme showing some of the richly varied choral works which come from the Baltic States and associated schools of composition. The emphasis will be on contemporary composers, with names such as Pärt, Gjeilo, Ešenvalds, Miskinis and Dubra, and will highlight that, whilst there are certain qualities which seem to identify this music’s geographical origin, they are nevertheless hugely varied in sound and style. This sumptuous variety includes Holy Minimalism and some very spare, haunting writing, through to the dense multi-choir pieces which truly deserve the term ‘choral orchestration’. Both secular and sacred music will feature, and the concert will be an exciting dip into this vast sea of music.