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| South Cotswold Big Sing Group |
Artistic director Jack Bazalgette has announced the full programme for the 81st Cheltenham Music Festival which runs from 3 to 11 July 2026. Bazalgette, promises "a chance to bring all kinds of people together and take the temperature of classical music today, get really excited for its future, and expand our horizons ever further."
The festival opens with Nicholas Collon conducting Aurora Orchestra in Jessie Montgomery's Strum, Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 with soloist Benjamin Grosvenor and Mozart's Symphony No. 41 'Jupiter' played from memory. David Crown will be conducting Cheltenham Bach Choir and the Musical and Amicable Society Orchestra in Verdi's Requiem with a terrific line-up of soloists - Ella Taylor, Rebecca Afonwy-Jones, Tom Elwin and Julian Close. Then the festival will be closed by John Wilson and his Sinfonia of London in a programme of English music from Vaughan Williams to Richard Rodney Bennett, with a focus on the music Eric Coates.
Another large-scale concert in more ways than one takes place at Tewkesbury Abbey when Adrian Partington conducts the British Sinfonietta and South Cotswold Big Sing Group in Bruckner's Te Deum and Mahler's Das Klagende Lied. Mahler wrote Das Klagende Lied between 1878 and 1880, then continued tinkering with it until the work was finally premiered in 1901. During that time, Mahler radically restructured the performing forces and reduced the work to two movements from three. Adrian Partington has opted to perform Mahler's 1893 revision which is still in three parts but reduces the performing forces somewhat (the number of harps in the first part being reduced from six to two, and the vocal soloists from eleven to four!). This is thought to be the first time that this version has been performed in the UK.
Soloists include pianists Mariam Bastsashvili (in Schubert and Liszt), Angela Hewitt (in Bach, Schumann and Ravel) and Pavel Kolesnikov (in an extended recital exploring Chopin’s complete Nocturnes). Siblings Sheku and Isata Kanneh-Mason have a duo concert, performing Fanny Mendelssohn, Nadia Boulanger, Robert Schumann and a transcription of Rebecca Clarke's Viola Sonata. Soprano Sophie Bevan and pianist Christopher Glynn join Harriet Walter for Shakespeare's Sisters featuring music inspired by Shakespeare alongside readings.
Senegalese multi-instrumentalist Dudù Kouate will be joining Irish folk musician, Shunya, and Jess Gillam Trio will deliver an energetic repertoire inspired by classical, jazz and folk.
The Festival's second Friday will feature a showcase concert for the members of this year's Composer Academy led by composer Laura Bowler, with the Carice Singers and George Parris.
New commissions feature across the programme: Irish-Italian violinist Violetta Suvini and Friends will perform three world premieres – from Jasmine Morris, Ben Nobuto and Imogen Davey. Vision String Quartet will perform their own commissioned piece for the first time, alongside works by Mozart and Grieg, all from memory.
In exciting collaboration, Fantasia Orchestra will perform with Jasdeep Singh Degun several of the sitar player’s own compositions, including a brand new co-commission, In Search of Redemption. They will also perform, among other pieces, Terry Riley’s revolutionary In C.
The collaboration with BBC New Generation Artists returns this year with recitals from Astatine Trio, Hana Chang (violin) and Oleg Shebeta-Dragan (clarinet). Also returning will be the Festival's Concert for Schools and SEND-focused Relaxed Concert for Schools and Relaxed Concert for Families. And the winner of the Gloucestershire Musician of the Year, 18-year-old Herbie Asquith-Dixon (violin) will perform Bruch's Violin Concerto No. 1 with Gloucestershire Symphony Orchestra, conductor Glyn Oxley.
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| Cheltenham Bach Choir at Cheltenham Town Hall (Photo: Still Moving Media for Cheltenham Festivals) |
For the Festival's opening weekend there are free pop-up concerts around town featuring a wide variety of artists from two brass bands, a saxophone quartet, and Tewkesbury Pub Singers to Iranian voice and guitar, Ukrainian bandura and voice, and Community "come and sing".
Full details from the festival website.









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