Today is tomorrow's history

Southrepps Music Festival

Author Neil Primrose

The Southrepps Classical Music Festival was founded by father and son Neil and Tom Primrose, a retired headteacher and his international conductor and pianist son, and their friends, singers Daniel Goode and Ben Johnson. The idea was born in 2008 and became a reality in 2010. It was an instant success, combining as it did some key factors. The first, of course, was the quality of the music-making which started extremely high and got better
every year with glowing reviews and attracting world-class musicians.

The second was the nature of Southrepps itself:

Performers arriving at Gunton station (Primrose)

In the early years so many of the performers and guests commented on the exceptional hospitality and the tightly knit nature of the village. The festival could not have happened had not people in the village opened their homes to performers between them providing accommodation for up to 50 musicians and singers. The Vernon Arms, indisputably the best public house in Britain, provided extraordinary quantities of food with daily meals and provided an important venue for meetings. St James Church was the venue for all the concerts, its exceptional acoustic and beautiful architecture gilding the already highly polished lily.  The village hall provided further accommodation for rehearsals and over the years some memorable end-of-festival parties with amazing food provided by hosts and the nearby Groveland Farm Shop. A large number of villagers were involved in the logistics of the festival: putting up rigs, staging, lights, marquees, proving refreshments, providing financial services and booking facilities, putting up advertisements, and over the years a large number of organisations and private individuals provided funding through donations and other kinds of support.

Britten’s The Burning Fiery Furnace ( Primrose)

The Repertoire
A good place to sample the repertoire is to visit the festival’s website which provided an
online festival during the pandemic in 2020:
Media – Southrepps Music Festival
Reviews:

September 2015
“In the helpfully unreverberant acoustic of high-towered St James’s Church, pleasingly barewithin despite the (excellent) Victorian restoration of the nave and with light flooding through the leaded Decorated-era windows, this team offered every gradation of sound from ghost-whispers to blazing unisons and multi-part splendours underpinned by the resonance of the two double-
basses which you could feel behind your back in the wooden bench supports.”
Southrepps Sinfonia and Soloists, Southrepps Festival | The Arts Desk

September 2019
“ When you’ve found some of the best young musicians in the world, and they’ve found that they love working in the peaceful surroundings of a magical spot in North Norfolk, you don’t let go. Tenor Ben Johnson and pianist Tom Primrose focused for a special-birthday Southrepps Music Festival on long-term visitors including BBC Young Musician of the Year 2014 Martin
James Bartlett, award-winning guitarist Sean Shibe and violinist Benjamin Baker alongside a stunning newcomer and Bartlett’s equal among more-than-promising pianists, Hungarian-born Daniel Lebhardt. With Britten’s The Burning Fiery Furnace as the fierce centrepiece -Southrepps’ first staged slice of music-theatre, opera, church parable, call it what you will -the 10th anniversary edition was unquestionably the richest ever”.
See theartsdesk at the Southrepps Music Festival – world-class young musicians return to North Norfolk.