A WORLD renowned choir will perform at Truro Cathedral next week.

The Sixteen celebrates its 40th anniversary this year and as part of its annual Choral Pilgrimage: An Enduring Voice April, it will come to Cornwall.

This year’s programme, entitled An Enduring Voice, spans choral works over six centuries to capture music past and present, highlighting the choir’s choral journey over the last four decades.

The tour began on April 3 at Kings Place, London, and runs for 27 performances across beautiful venues all over the UK.

It will perform at Truro Cathedral on Friday, October 11.

The Sixteen has long been celebrated for its championing of Tudor music, particularly that of the Eton Choirbook, as well as choral treasures of the 20th century and its work with 21st-century composers.

This year’s programme revisits The Sixteen’s grassroots with performances of English polyphony juxtaposed with works by Tavener and Eric Whitacre.

The Sixteen’s close relationship with award-winning composer, Sir James MacMillan continues with a new commission, O virgo prudentissma based on a fragment from the Eton Choirbook.

The programme also features Tavener’s Hymn to the Mother of God & Hymn for the Dormition of the Mother of God, Sheppard’s Gloria & Agnus Dei from Cantate Mass, Eric Whitacre’s SainteChapelle, Fayrfax’s Eternae laudis lilium which was performed on The Sixteen’s very first recording on Hyperion, Gabriel Jackson’s Ave Maria and Wylkynson’s monumental Salve Regina, also from the Eton Choirbook.

The Sixteen continues to invest in a number of dynamic education and outreach projects with the aim of engaging further with its current audience and also developing a new one. The ethos of access and support runs throughout their thriving education programme.

During the tour, the choir invites those who enjoy choral music to join in through the Choral Workshop Series. This year, the choir undertakes eight workshops to give keen amateur singers an opportunity to explore a selection of music inspired by its 19th Choral Pilgrimage programme.

The workshops include advice on vocal technique, as well as performance interpretation and historical context all under the guidance of Associate Conductor Eamonn Dougan and singer and practical scholar Sally Dunkley.

Throughout the Choral Pilgrimage tour the education team spend a five-day residency in Carlisle, Manchester and Truro with animateur Sam Glazer and singers from Genesis Sixteen, its free choral training programme for singers aged 18-23.

The education team also deliver its annual schools matinee project with Key Stage 2 pupils, as well as working with the wider community with relaxed performances in care-homes, further developing its work with the homeless and for the first time working with refugee groups.

There is an accompanying tour CD, An Enduring Voice (COR16170), released on The Sixteen’s own label CORO, available to buy at www.thesixteenshop.com/products/an-enduring-voice

Tickets for the Truro Cathedral performance are available at www.thesixteen.com/events/the-choral-pilgrimage-2019-truro/