Three Choirs Festival
When Worcester Festival Choral Society was originally established in 1861, one of its stated purposes was to provide highly skilled singers to the world-renowned Three Choirs Festival Chorus, which performs many of the Festival's annual flagship concerts in Worcester, Hereford and Gloucester Cathedrals. Today, WFCS members are proud to continue forming a major part of the Festival Chorus each year.
Beginning in 1715, the Three Choirs Festival is the oldest, non-competitive classical music festival in the world, and celebrated its 300th anniversary in 2015. It now comprises a week-long programme of choral and orchestral concerts, cathedral services, music recitals, masterclasses, talks, theatre, exhibitions and walks, rotating each summer between the beautiful English cathedral cities of Worcester, Hereford and Gloucester.
At the heart of each Festival are the large-scale evening concerts featuring the Three Choirs Festival Chorus, internationally acclaimed solo artists and the Philharmonia Orchestra, which has been resident at the Festival since 2012.
Concert programmes combine established favourites of the British classical choral tradition, with works drawn from a broader, more international musical canvas. Some are conducted by the directors of music of the three cathedrals, who also undertake the role of Artistic Director of their city’s Festival, and some by leading name guest conductors from the UK and abroad. In 2017, a performance of Elgar's The Dream of Gerontius was attended by the Three Choirs Festival's President, the then-HRH The Prince of Wales (now King Charles III).
In the summer of 2024 the Three Choirs Festival returned to our home city of Worcester, with our Director of Music, Samuel Hudson, as its Artistic Director. As well as placing the focus on nature and the environment, the Festival also marked 100 years since the death of Charles Villiers Stanford, 150 years since the birth of Gustav Holst, and Judith Weir’s 70th birthday.
For details of the 2025 Festival, in Hereford, visit the Three Choirs Festival website.
Next Concert
BACH - ST MATTHEW PASSION
Johann Sebastian Bach’s inspirational 1727 oratorio St Matthew Passion is both a musical icon for the Christian world and an expression of feelings common to the whole of humanity.
Known as the ‘Great Passion’, it presents a powerful setting of Jesus's final days, drawing on parts of St Matthew’s Gospel.
From intimate grief to monumental crowd scenes, the work’s richly scored arias, chorales and choruses sculpt the story into a gripping drama, told with a vivid sense of theatre by double chorus, ... read more