Handel's Messiah at Chelmsford Cathedral
Handel's Messiah at Chelmsford Cathedral
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Handel Messiah
Following their sell-out tours in 2023 and 2024, Wild Arts returns to Chelmsford Cathedral with their trademark fresh and innovative approach to Handel's legendary telling of the Christmas story this December.
Performing the entire piece from memory, the singers bring music and story to life, with staging devised by theatre and opera director Tom Morris (Breaking the Waves, Dr Semmelweis, War Horse). The musicians of the Wild Arts Ensemble, playing period instruments, are directed by Wild Arts’ Artistic Director Orlando Jopling in this enthralling and moving production that has received standing ovations across the country.
Sofia Kirwan-Baez & Joanna Songi soprano
Martha Jones & Kate Symonds-Joy mezzo
Guy Elliott & Harry Jacques tenor
Timothy Nelson baritone
Edward Hawkins bass
Sijie Chen & Will McGahon violin
Hannah Shaw viola
George Ross cello
Marianne Schofield bass
Leo Duarte & Geoff Coates oboe
Chris Rawley bassoon
Brendan Lewis & Sam Lewis trumpet
TBC timpani
Orlando Jopling harpsichord
You are welcome to arrive from 6pm, and the performance will start at 7pm. The performance will last approx. 2 hours 30 minutes including interval
A bar in the North Transept will be open to serve pre-concert and interval drinks.
Band A £50 - Good views
Band B £42 - Further back
Band C £32 - may have restricted views
Band D £15 - may have restricted or obscured views
£15 for under 25s
Seats are unreserved and may be taken first come, first served within each price band.
To book tickets at £15 for under 25s, please email us at info@wildarts.org.uk.
The Cathedral is fully accessible and wheelchair spaces will be provided on request, with a free carer seat alongside. Please email us at info@wildarts.org.uk for any access or seating questions and we would be very happy to help.
Chelmsford Cathedral
Originally a parish church, the first recorded service dates back to 1223, and the earliest stonework discovered here is from Norman times. In the 15th Century, the church was rebuilt to include the tower, parapets and magnificent South porch. Due to feuding during the War of the Roses between the the Yorkist Bouchiers and the Lancastrian de Veres who were funding the rebuilding, it took nearly a century to complete.
However, as you look at the exterior of the Cathedral from the South side, not all of what you see dates back to medieval times. In 1800 workmen digging to open a vault, undermined the building and the whole roof, north and south aisles collapsed. So the central area, paler in colour than the medieval west end, is made of Coade stone. Coade stone was often called artificial stone but is in fact a high quality and extremely weatherproof stone. It has also been used in St George’s Chapel in Windsor.
On the north side of the Cathedral, the vestry block whilst looking medieval with its flint wall exterior, is in fact twentieth century. The attention given to matching the exterior makes it difficult to tell the age of the building by sight alone. Another twentieth century addition which is perhaps easier to spot is the carving of St Peter. St Peter faces Bradwell, where St Cedd originally landed in the seventh century having left Lindisfarne on a mission to bring Christianity to the East Coast and founded the chapel which still stands today.
How can we tell that this is a modern carving? St Peter holds a Yale key.
Location
Chelmsford Cathedral, CM1 1TY