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Festival celebrates the life of eminent composer Parry

This year is the centenary of the death of Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, one of the great 19th century British composers. A festival over the May Bank Holiday, is being held to mark the event.

Gloucester Cathedral.

This year is the centenary of the death of Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, one of the great 19th century British composers. A festival over the May Bank Holiday, is being held to mark the event.

Beginning on a cheery note, along with the third of Leonard Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms, I want “Dear Lord and Father of Mankind” at my funeral.

Its wonderful repose-seeking words from the pen of the American Quaker poet John Greenleaf Whittier (1807- 92) are set to a melody by the composer Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry.

The tune was first heard in Parry’s oratorio Judith (premiered at the 1888 Birmingham Triennial Musical Festival), but in 1924 George Gilbert Stocks, director of music at Repton School in Derbyshire, compiling a new chapel hymnal, combined Parry’s music with Whittier’s verses to create one of our most beloved hymns, known, of course, as Repton.

At the end of the 19th century Parry was the most eminent composer in the United Kingdom, and he was generous in his advancement of a younger, totally unqualified aspirant who eventually eclipsed him. That man was Edward Elgar, born in Worcestershire, next to Parry’s own county, Gloucestershire. The huge difference between them was that Elgar was the son of a shopkeeper, Parry the well-educated son of a country squire. But they are linked by a penchant for huge, sweeping melodies mirroring the landscape of the Malvern Hills which straddle their homeland.

This year is the centenary of Parry’s death, and the event is being marked by a mini-festival over the May Bank Holiday weekend.

Gloucester Cathedral will be the chief venue, but the programme also takes in the composer’s childhood home at Highnam Court, just outside the city.

The festival begins on Friday, May 4 with a screening of the feature-length BBC documentary film “The Prince and the Composer” in the Ivor Gurney School at the King’s School, Gloucester. The Prince of Wales, himself a well-known Gloucestershire resident, joins members of Parry’s family in exploring the composer’s life and work (7.30pm, wine and canapes inclusive).