The Choir of St Paul’s College, Sydney, is performing at some of the world’s most famous churches
The choir, which won the International Christian Choir Competition last year, is amid a major European tour, which this week featured residencies at the Abbey in London, St Paul’s Cathedral, Canterbury Cathedral and York Minster for Evensong services. Performances at Saint-Sulpice, La Madeleine, and Saint-Eustache are scheduled in Paris next week.
Accompanied by renowned organist David Drury, the 32-member choir has performed to thousands of worshippers, often more than once a day, in some of the world’s most famous churches.
Elinor Trevelyan-Jones, 19, said to sing at Westminister Abbey had special significance to her because her father, Warren, was a full-time member of the choir for several years before she was born. Studying an arts degree at the University of Sydney, she said the fortnight’s tour was “the stuff of dreams”.
“This is just like a hobby for me, like I’m not a professional, neither are most of us, so to get this opportunity is really amazing,” she says.
The choir is made up predominantly of undergraduates at the university, and Stephens says the group, with an average age of 20, comprises members studying everything from law to engineering and who “just have a real passion for singing”. The choir rehearses and performs every week during the year, and is primarily involved in the singing of Evensong in the college chapel.
Stephens, 29, admits he was overwhelmed at first with the nine-second reverb when the choir first performed at St Paul’s.
“It’s just really just like nothing else,” he says. “We finished the chord, and then we just hear it go down and down and down before it stops … took a little bit of getting used to just the difference in acoustics.”
He says he detected some initial apprehension from various hosts, who “didn’t know what to expect from a choir from the other side of the world”. But he was confident they were won over every time.
“For a bunch of 19- and 20-year-olds, who are so passionate about liturgical choir music, to share that on the world stage is really something so unique,” he says.
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