Janet Wheeler (born 1957) is a British composer and choral conductor, based in Saffron Walden, Essex. [1]
Wheeler was a junior exhibitioner at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama from the age of 10. She read music at Newnham College, Cambridge. [2] After graduating, Wheeler became a secondary school music teacher, then became a music producer for BBC Schools radio primary music before specialising entirely in conducting and composing.[ citation needed ]
Wheeler's music has been sung by I Fagiolini, [3] Gloucester Cathedral Choir, [4] the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain, [5] the Chapel Choir of University College, Oxford, [6] Sonoro Choir, [7] ORA Singers, [8] Farnham Youth Choir, [9] Harlequin Chamber Choir, [10] Psallite Women's Choir, [11] Imperial College Choir, [12] Southampton Philharmonic Choir [13] the Chandos Chamber Choir and [14] St Bride's Choir at St Bride's Church. [15] In 2018 the London International Choral Conducting Competition commissioned The Cries of Music with words written by Welsh librettist and poet Euan Tait. [16]
Wheeler's music has been sung at the Three Choirs Festival [17] and at the Leith Hill Music Festival.
Wheeler was commissioned by her alma mater Newnham College, Cambridge to write Better is Wisdom than Weapons of War, inspired by the famous words from the college's suffrage banner, for the 100th anniversary of the Newnham Roll in 2018. [18]
As part of Sonoro Choir's 2019 Choral Inspirations project, Wheeler was commissioned to compose a new piece alongside five other British composers: Cheryl Frances-Hoad, Will Todd, Russell Hepplewhite, Joanna Marsh and James McCarthy. Her piece, Beati quorum via, was inspired by Charles Villiers Stanford's piece of the same name. [7]
Wheeler publishes her own compositions under the MazeMusic imprint. Hal Leonard de Haske publish some of her lighter pieces [19] and Novello published her introit We Sing to God, the Spring of Mirth. [20] The anthem Alleluia, I heard a voice is published in the Multitude of Voyces: Sacred Music by Women Composers anthology published in 2019 by Multitude of Voyces, and currently distributed by Stainer & Bell. [21]
Wheeler founded the chamber choir Granta Chorale in 2007 [22] and since 2010 she has also conducted SignuptoSing, the Saffron Walden Youth Choir. [23] She also conducts the Chamber Choir at Saffron Walden County High School. [24]
In 2016, Wheeler won the Friends of Cathedral Music Diamond Jubilee Introit competition for We Sing to God, the Spring of Mirth. [25] In 2017, she won the Hendrix Candlelight Carol Competition for her piece Behold, I Come [26] and also the Leith Hill Musical Festival Composition Competition for Seventy Three. [27]
The War Requiem, Op. 66, is a large-scale setting of the Requiem composed by Benjamin Britten mostly in 1961 and completed in January 1962. The War Requiem was performed for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral, which was built after the original fourteenth-century structure was destroyed in a World War II bombing raid. The traditional Latin texts are interspersed, in telling juxtaposition, with extra-liturgical poems by Wilfred Owen, written during World War I.
Howard Lindsay Goodall is an English composer of musicals, choral music and music for television. He also presents music-based programmes for television and radio, for which he has won many awards. In May 2008, he was named as a presenter and "Composer-in-Residence" with the UK radio channel Classic FM. In May 2009, he was named "Composer of the Year" at the Classic BRIT Awards.
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