Posted in Family, Personal life, Writing

Inspired by the Badminton Benefice Festival of Music

“If you want something done, ask a busy person.”

That may be one reason that I’ve found myself helping behind the scenes with a wonderful  new music event founded by Badminton Benefice Music Director Ben Humphries. Badminton Benefice – part of the Diocese of Gloucester – contains ten ancient and beautiful rural churches, each in an idyllic, timeless setting. Sharing one vicar between them, the Reverend Richard Thomson, there is a limit to how many church services they can host each month.

One of the aims of the Festival is to provide occasions for more people to visit the churches and to enjoy these historically significant settings which are such a rich part of our local heritage. The other aim is to create live, accessible music events to the local community.  All of the events are free to attend, but donations towards the maintenance of the churches and to the music charity Youth Music, which gives young people the chance to transform their lives through the power of music.

Each event will be different, resulting in a glorious mixture of musical offerings, some with art and/or flowers, and always refreshments, to be held on Sunday afternoons, one each month, from May to September. The event poster provides a handy summary of the programme:

promotional poster of the events of Badminton Benefice Festival of Music 2025

The charming line drawings of each church are by Gillian Dawson, a former member of Hawkesbury Choir.

My role in the Festival has been as part of a small team behind the scenes, helping to raise awareness of the concert series and to attract an audience. I  sang in the first event, which took place last month at my home church of St Mary’s, Hawkesbury.

photo of St Mary the Virgin Hawkesbury in its idyllic rural setting
The Church of St Mary the Virgin, photographed in its gorgeous ancient rural setting one Easter Sunday, viewed from Hawkesbury Knoll

The Come & Sing! event, directed by the brilliant singing teacher Amy Garry of Voices Together, also inspired me to write the following article for the May issue of the Hawkesbury Parish News. Even though the event has happened now, I thought you might still like to read it.


For the Love of Singing

One of the highlights of primary school for me was the daily assembly, in which we’d all sing together in the school hall.

Days Lane Primary School, in Sidcup, Kent, was actually two schools in one, a single-storey brick quadrangle built in the 1920s. The infants were in one half, the juniors in the other, each with their own school hall and head teacher.

The daily assembly included two hymns from the pale blue Songs of Praise book and a few thoughtful words to inspire us. Every Tuesday, the Juniors stayed on after assembly while the teachers went back to their classroom (or maybe to drink coffee and smoke in the staffroom), leaving our jovial headmaster, Mr Bowering, to lead the whole school in hymn practice. From his lectern on the stage, accompanied by a pianist, he taught us new hymns. He also insisted on a rousing weekly rendition of ‘Jerusalem’. I still remember the words and numbers of my favourite hymns.

Cover of the Songs of Praise hymnbook
The Songs of Praise hymnbook – the soundtrack for my childhood

I loved this vibrant act of community – the only occasion that all the pupils were engaged in the same activity. How Mr Bowering must have enjoyed conducting our singing in one roof-raising voice as we gazed up at him.

I also loved the sense of place. A simple map of the globe hung above the stage, making us feel like citizens of the world. Tiny lightbulbs picked out the capital cities of the most important countries. Mr Bowering controlled them from a box of switches beneath his lectern. When he lit up a city, we’d have to shout its name.

I miss those Tuesday mornings. That’s one reason I joined Hawkesbury Choir. Like those school hymn practices, weekly choir practices have become an important fixture in my calendar. I count them as an act of self-care, good for my well-being mentally and physically. I even managed to persuade my GP they count as exercise. (He gave me another tick for bell ringing practice.) I’ve been lucky enough to sing with Hawkesbury Choir not only in our own ancient parish church, but also in the beautiful parish churches of Badminton, Cirencester, Didmarton, and Leighterton.

photo of choir outside Badminton Chiurch
Hawkesbury Choir with guest singers after singing at the Badminton Horse Trials Morning Prayer service earlier this year (I’m fourth from the right)

While community singing can make everyone feel better, hymns aren’t everyone’s cup of tea. So, it’s great news that a fun, free, secular singing event, COME & SING, will take place on Sunday 18th May at St Mary’s Hawkesbury, and it’s open to all ages from 9 to 109. Although it’ll take place in the church, we’ll be singing popular contemporary music rather than hymns. Think ‘Mamma Mia’ rather than ‘Ave Maria’, although I can’t promise Abba will be on the agenda.

  • From 1pm, there’ll be a singing workshop led by professional singing teacher Amy Garry of Voices Together, accompanied by Ben Humphries, Badminton Benefice Music Director.
  • At 4pm, the singers will perform an informal concert for anyone who cares to attend. Light refreshments will be provided.

All of this is free of charge, although donations will be welcome. Any profit will be shared between St Mary’s PCC and the music charity Youth Music.

  • To join the workshop, please register at badmintonbenefice.com.
  • To attend the concert, no booking is necessary – just turn up.

COME & SING! is the first in a series of musical events in the new Badminton Benefice Festival of Music to be held this summer in churches throughout the Benefice. All of the events will be free to attend, apart from the grand finale at Great Badminton in November featuring the newly restored organ. More information and dates will be shared on the Benefice website as details are confirmed.

In the meantime, you know what to do… COME & SING!

(This article first appeared in the May 2025 issue of the Hawkesbury Parish News.)


NEXT EVENT IN THE BADMINTON BENEFICE FESTIVAL OF MUSIC:  Young Musicians at St Mary the Virgin, Sopworth on Sunday 22nd June

While it’s too late for you to join in the COME & SING! event described above, if you’re within striking distance of the Badminton Benefice, you might like to come along to our June event, an uplifting recital by students of Westonbirt School at Sopworth’s Church of St Mary the Virgin. (In all, five of the Benefice churches are St Mary’s!) It will take place on Sunday 22nd June, starting at 2.45pm. Yes, that is an unusual starting time, but it’s carefully chosen to fit in between the students’ Sundy lunch and their rehearsals later in the day for the school’s annual musical production! poster for June 22nd Young Musicians concert

For more information about the Badminton Benefice Music Festival, visit its website page at www.badmintonbenefice.om/festival-of-music


IN OTHER NEWS

cover of Listen with Father by Caroline Sanderson
To be published on 3rd July by Unbound

Yesterday I met my friend Caroline Sanderson, author and books journalist, for lunch, and I was delighted to hear all about her plans for the launch of her new book, which is on a musical theme.

The title, Listen with Father, is a nod towards those of us old enough to remember the daily children’s BBC Radio programme, Listen with Mother, heralded each week by the delightful theme tune, the Berceuse from Fauré’s “Dolly Suite“. However, the subtitle, How I Learned to Love Classical Music, alludes to Caroline’s father’s legacy – a lasting love ot the classics. Caroline’s publisher, Unbound, describes her book as follows:

Listen with Father is a book about the transformative power of listening, and about how we remember those we have loved and lost.

At four years old, Caroline Sanderson fell in love with the music of Mozart after listening to it with her father. At eight, she fell even harder for the songs of David Bowie. Her dad made many gentle attempts to persuade her back to his world of classical music, but it wasn’t until after he died that she returned to it, in memory of him.

In a beguiling blend of memoir and biography, we follow Sanderson as she set out to listen, with great care and attention, to the music her dad loved, to work out why he so appreciated it and whether she could too. From hearing Mozart recitals in Salzburg to visiting Sibelius’s house near Helsinki and playing Robert Schumann at home on the piano, this is a beautifully touching and absorbing story of a beloved father, told through the classical music he cherished.

Order your copy in paperback or ebook from the publisher’s website here.


Meanwhile, there is lots of pending news about my books, but some of it’s embargoed until next week, so watch this space!

Author:

Author of feelgood contemporary popular fiction, including three series of cozy mystery novels and four collections of short stories. Published in English, German, and Italian. Represented by Ethan Ellenberg Literary Agents. Founder and director of the Hawkesbury Upton Literature Festival. Course tutor for Jericho Writers. Member of the Society of Authors and the Alliance of Independent Authors. Lives and writes in a Victorian cottage in the beautiful Cotswold countryside.

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