IN CONCERT Cadogan Hall, London Thursday 26 April 2018, 7:30pm
TOP CO-EDUCATIONAL SCHOOL IN SURREY FOR THE FOURTH YEAR RUNNING The Daily Telegraph and Sunday Times
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WELCOME
FROM THE HEADMASTER
I
am delighted to welcome you to Reigate Grammar School in Concert here at Cadogan Hall. It is wonderful to have the opportunity to celebrate the quality and breadth of music making at RGS. Cadogan Hall is one of London’s greatest live music venues and seems appropriate for the calibre of performances this evening.
It is imperative that every child has the opportunity to be creative, make music and to perform. Tonight, two hundred and fifty musicians from Reigate Grammar School, Reigate St Mary’s Preparatory and Choir School, Chinthurst School and Micklefield School will perform music from Brahms and Elgar to The Greatest Showman and Queen in what, I’m sure, will be an exceptional evening.
Shaun Fenton Headmaster headmaster@reigategrammar.org @rgsheadmaster
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FROM THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC
RGS
is well known for its strong musical tradition. Music infuses the ethos and is an integral part of each school day, whether it be instrumental or singing lessons, performances in assemblies and community events, or taking part in one of the plentiful concerts that fill the school calendar. The music department is committed to developing the potential of every student, whatever their experience and whatever the style of the music. Ensemble music making is a crucial part of a performer’s development, and tonight’s offering will show the variety and depth of opportunities on offer at RGS. Students are encouraged to join ensembles and choirs from the moment they join the school and participation is encouraged from absolute beginners and seasoned performers alike. RGS musicians have represented the school at St John’s, Smith Square in the inaugural RGS London concert; at the Royal Festival Hall as members of the Duet Philharmonic – a youth orchestra formed of the best musicians from leading independent schools; and at the Barbican and Royal Albert Hall as part of the National Youth Orchestra.
There are annual international tours with concerts in concert halls and cathedrals throughout Europe: recent destinations have included Ghent and Brussels, Florence and Lucca. There are also regular opportunities for travel within the UK, with singers performing on cathedral tours of Wells, Salisbury and Chichester. Many leavers from Reigate Grammar School have gone on to pursue music at a high level whilst at university; several singers have been awarded choral awards by Oxbridge and Durham colleges; another represents King’s, London as part of ‘All the King’s Men’ – an award winning a cappella group; and more have gone on to study music at top flight institutions. The music department is proud to present this concert tonight and delighted to be working with Reigate St Mary’s, Micklefield and Chinthurst Schools in this venture.
Toby Carden RGS Director of Music txc@reigategrammar.org @rgs_music
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CADOGAN HALL ETIQUETTE AND INFORMATION Set in a fantastic location in the heart of Chelsea, Cadogan Hall has become one of London’s leading venues. The hall’s 950 seats, excellent acoustic and luxurious surroundings makes it the first choice for some of the UK’s top orchestras, including the hall’s resident orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic, as well as a favourite London destination for international touring orchestras. Cadogan Hall is the chosen venue for the world-famous BBC Proms Chamber Music Series and also offers a vibrant selection of contemporary, jazz, folk and world music events as well as talks, debates and conferences. Upon opening, in 1907, the New Christian Science Church regularly seated congregations of sixteen hundred, however by the 1980’s the congregation was barely one hundred and fifty. In 1996 the congregation was no longer able to cope and sold the building, which fell into disuse. The Cadogan Estate purchased the building in 2000 to safeguard its future. Through their connection with Opera Holland Park, the Cadogan Estate discovered that the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra was looking for a permanent base in London. Becoming the home of the Royal Philharmonic gave the former church an excellent opportunity to fulfil Cadogan’s aim of bringing the former church back into useful life in a manner befitting its character and civic presence. Though on one level the conversion of a relatively modern church, with readymade auditorium, raked seating, stage and gallery extensive work was needed to improve facilities and comfort of the hall as well as to meet building and licensing regulations. The hall reopened as a concert hall in June 2004.
To improve the performance acoustic within the auditorium the ceiling and roof had to be re-detailed to provide acoustic insulation. Tuned resonator tubes were installed on the ceiling and walls and the undersides of the seats in the stalls also have a pattern of ‘absorption holes’ to retain the hall’s acoustic character. The original church organ was carefully dismantled and re-installed in its new home, a church in the Midlands. When the organ screen was re-assembled and nearly a century of dirt was removed it was found that each of the column capitals and each of the carvings around the arching balustrade is unique - a surprise discovery that added to the richness of the building. The stained glass was designed by Baron Arild Rosenkrantz, a Danish nobleman who had learnt the art whilst working with Tiffany in New York. The designs were said to exhibit “artistic simplicity of patterning and to provide efficiency of lighting and economy consistent with dignity.” Although the Celtic knot motifs are simple and the use of colour restrained, the dramatic effect of the
restored glass was another pleasant surprise during the refurbishment process. A history of the church written in 1931 expressed the aspiration that the building would be “able to respond to the call of progress”. The Cadogan Estate’s vision and investment in the fabric and infrastructure has fulfilled this wish and should ensure that Cadogan Hall will continue to play a major part in the civic and cultural life London for the next 100 years.
Cadogan Hall 5 Sloane Terrace London SWIX 9DQ
Box Office 020 7730 4500 www.cadoganhall.com Cadogan Hall photos: Todd Creative Services
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ETIQUETTE Smoking All areas of Cadogan Hall are non-smoking areas.
Food & Beverages You are kindly requested not to bring food and other refreshments into Cadogan Hall.
Cameras and Electronic Devices Video equipment, cameras and tape recorders are not permitted. Please ensure all pagers and mobile phones are switched off before entering the auditorium.
Interval and timings There will be one fifteen minute interval. Latecomers will not be admitted until a suitable break in the performance.
Consideration We aim to deliver the highest standards of service. Therefore, we would ask you to treat our staff with courtesy and in a manner in which you would expect to be treated.
FOOD AND BEVERAGES Oakley Bar and CafĂŠ A small selection of sandwiches, cakes and snacks is available Concert goers may also enjoy a wide selection of champagnes, spirits, red and white wines, beers and soft drinks.
Culford Room The house wines, champagne and soft drinks are available from the bars in the Culford Room at all concerts.
Gallery Bar Customers seated in the Gallery may buy interval drinks from the Gallery Bar at some concerts.
ACCESS Cadogan Hall has a range of services to assist disabled customers including a provision for wheelchair users in the stalls. Companions of disabled customers are entitled to a free seat when assisting disabled customers at Cadogan Hall. Please note that companion seats not sold 48hrs prior to any given performance will be released for general sale.
Wheel Chair Users If you use a wheelchair and wish to transfer to a seat, we regret we may not be able to provide a member of staff to help you physically. However, we will arrange for your wheelchair to be taken away and stored. A lift is located to the right once inside the box office reception allowing access to a lowered box office counter. Foyer areas are on the same level as the box office and the foyer bar (Caversham Room) is accessed via a wide access lift. A member of staff will help you with your requirements. Stalls are accessed via a wide lift as are adapted toilet facilities. Please note that there is no wheelchair access to the Gallery seats.
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SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Williams Theme from Star Wars Johannes Brahms Academic Festival Overture op. 80 Edward Elgar Cello Concerto in E minor op. 85 I. Adagio – Moderato Reinhold Glière Concerto for Harp and Orchestra I. Allegro Moderato Cello: Yasmin Herbert Harp: Eleanor Medcalf Conductor: Mr Toby Carden
The RGS Symphony Orchestra features the school’s most confident and experienced instrumental players performing on a large scale. The group explores a large Romantic orchestral repertoire, musical theatre and film classics and the musicians show much independence in their commitment to creating exciting performances. Recent performances have included Mendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture, Prokofiev’s Montagues and Capulets from Romeo and Juliet, and Arturo Marquez’s Danzon no. 2. The title music for the original Star Wars film regularly tops polls of the best film soundtracks of all time. John Williams’ epic score bravely recollects the golden age of Hollywood alongside the new sci-fi worlds imagined by George Lucas. The music, as much as the film itself, has become truly iconic and has not lost any of its power. The Academic Festival Overture was Brahms’ response to being awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Breslau. It was expected that Brahms would write a symphony for the occasion however he chose instead to incorporate four popular student drinking songs into an orchestral showpiece, gently undermining the rather serious occasion. The score calls for one of Brahms’ largest orchestral combinations and ranges from jaunty to boisterous in character, ending with an exuberant rendition of the famous hymn Gaudeamus Igitur.
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The Elgar Cello Concerto is one of the most beloved pieces in the repertoire, popularised by the seminal recording by Jacqueline du Pré. The Cello Concerto was the last major work that Elgar wrote and it is filled with mournful longing and an overriding sense of sadness. Elgar’s wife, Alice, was ill while Elgar was composing and died shortly after the première – causing Elgar to wonder whether his “creative spirit had died with her”. The first movement, heard tonight, opens with a volatile, impassioned solo cello giving way to the elegiac theme that forms the backbone of the rest of the movement. Yasmin Herbert is an accomplished trumpeter and singer alongside being an outstanding cellist. She has performed with almost all of the instrumental and choral groups at RGS and has performed at the Royal Festival Hall with the Duet Philharmonic. Glière was a direct contemporary of Rachmaninoff and Ravel and wrote his Harp Concerto in 1938 for the harpist Ksenia Erdelia, The style is reminiscent of both Viennese classical music and Russian Romantic nationalism – this conservative style prompted the Soviet authorities to lavish awards and commendations on Glière. The first movement starts with characteristic spread chords on the harp, has expressive clarinet and oboe solos and a prominent cadenza. Eleanor Medcalf plays the harp in the National Youth Orchestra, sings in the Rodolfus Choir and has recently been offered a choral scholarship to Cambridge. She plays the cello and piano in several other school ensembles and has played many roles on the stage in innumerable school productions.
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CONCERT BAND Klaus Badelt Pirates of the Caribbean Johann Johannsson arr. Longfield The Theory of Everything Conductor: Mr Nick Lobb
The Concert Band is the senior ensemble for wind, brass and percussion players at RGS. Their repertoire is wide ranging and includes music from films and the stage to compositions by Sousa and Holst. Recently the band went on tour to Ghent, Belgium where they performed several concerts at venues including St Bavo’s Cathedral, Ghent and Cathedrale Saint Michel et Saint Gudule, Brussels. The music from the original Pirates of the Caribbean film is a perennial favourite, providing a suitably bombastic accompaniment to the swashbuckling adventure on screen. This arrangement features music from throughout the travails of Will Turner and Captain Jack Sparrow to rescue Elizabeth Swann from cursed pirate Captain Barbossa. The Theory of Everything tells the story of the late physicist Stephen Hawking, from his time as a graduate student at Cambridge and his early-onset motor neurone disease (ALS) to the publication and worldwide success of his book A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes. The soundtrack is filled with neoclassical themes and Jóhannsson, who also died this year, wrote that “the music had to be timeless, time is a huge motif in the film, and the music had to reflect that”.
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SWING BAND
Stevie Wonder arr. Mossman Sir Duke Don Raye & Hughie Prince Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy Singers: Ava Warriner, Camille Du Buisson, Goya Verity Director: Mr Nick Lobb
The Swing Band is the senior jazz ensemble at RGS. The group includes many of the school’s most versatile and accomplished musicians and throughout the year their performances give many of them the chance to shine in a solo capacity. The highlight of the Swing Band’s year is always their summer showcase, An Evening with the Swing Band, which rounds off the musical year at RGS. The offerings this evening give several of this year’s leavers prominent roles. The Stevie Wonder song ‘Sir Duke’ includes a virtuosic tenor sax solo by Ben Silverman and ‘Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy’ has three featured vocalists, Ava Warriner, Goya Verity and Camille Du Buisson, as well as Milo Stephens as the eponymous ‘Bugle Boy’. ‘Sir Duke’ was released in 1977 as Stevie Wonder’s tribute to Duke Ellington, who had died three years earlier, and to other jazz greats including Louis Armstrong and Glenn Miller. Wonder wanted this song to memorialise these musicians, later saying “I wanted it to be about the musicians who did something for us. So soon are they forgotten.” Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy tells the story of a famed street musician drafted into the US Army prior to the Second World War who suffers as a result of no longer being able to play the music he loves. The song became a wartime classic thanks to the Andrews Sisters, who performed throughout the US, Europe and Africa to troops stationed far from home. Bette Midler also recorded it in 1977, in a recording produced by Barry Manilow, introducing the song to a new generation of fans.
INTERVAL - 15 MINUTES
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SPRING ORCHESTRA George Friedrich Handel Overture, La Rejouissance and Minuet from Music for the Royal Fireworks
The Spring Orchestra primarily gives the younger instrumentalists at RGS the chance to play together, improve their ensemble skills and confidence and make musical friends as they take on the challenge of orchestral and band repertoire.
Gustav Holst arr. Kenny Jupiter from The Planets
Handel was commissioned to write Music for the Royal Fireworks by King George II in 1749 for a firework show in Green Park to celebrate the end of the War of the Austrian Succession. The Spring Orchestra will perform three movements from the suite.
Conductor: Mr Richard Hare
The Planets Suite was written by Holst during the First World War with each movement representing a planet and its astrological character. Jupiter, the bringer of jollity, is the fourth movement and contains the famous tune co-opted for the hymn ’I vow to thee my country’.
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA John Williams Theme from Schindler’s List Violin: Anna Anderson Conductor: Mr Toby Carden
The Oscar winning soundtrack to Steven Spielberg’s film Schindler’s List adds a searing emotional depth to the much-lauded and haunting film telling the story of a German businessman and his work during the Second World War which resulted in the salvation of over a thousand Jewish workers from the Holocaust. When John Williams saw the film for the first time, after being asked to compose the score, he was so moved he could barely speak. “Steven,” he said, “you need a better composer than I am.” Spielberg replied, “I know, but they’re all dead!”. Anna Anderson is an extremely accomplished violinist and singer and has been a stalwart of the department for seven years at RGS performing in orchestral, chamber and choral music alongside many solo performances.
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CHORISTERS OF THE RGS GODFREY SEARLE CHOIR John Rutter I will sing with the Spirit Piano: Mr Edmund Evans Director: Mrs Tali Glynne-Jones
The Choristers of the RGS Godfrey Searle Choir are girls and boys from Reigate St Mary’s Prep School and Reigate Grammar School. They sing weekly services at St Mary’s Church, rehearse sacred choral music daily during term time and make frequent visits to sing evensong in cathedrals around the country. Rutter sets the words of 1 Corinthians 14:15, a hymn of praise, with an attractive melody and lilting accompaniment in I will sing with the Spirit.
MICKLEFIELD SCHOOL SENIOR CHOIR Benj Pasek and Justin Paul arr. Mac Huff This is Me Sting arr. Roger Emerson Fields of Gold Piano: Mr Richard Hare Director: Mrs Emma Denny
The Senior Choir at Micklefield School is delighted to perform with RGS once more. The choir is made up of pupils from Years 5 and 6 with a passion for singing. They sing an eclectic mix of songs throughout the year at venues around Reigate and hope that you enjoy their selection this evening. This is Me, a song from the film The Greatest Showman, has become an instant favourite with many and the choir enjoys being able to open up and tell people: This is me! The song charts the growing self-acceptance of a bearded lady in Barnum’s circus. Beautiful as a contrast, Fields of Gold is a song about feeling joyous, but knowing that joy will one day end. Sting was inspired to write this song by colours of a barley field by his house at sunset.
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CHINTHURST SCHOOL CHOIR
Will Todd The Lord is my Shepherd Piano: Mr David Bishop
Chinthurst School is fortunate in being able to use Tadworth Parish Church for assemblies where the thirty strong choir sings an anthem and leads the school in hymns. The choir’s sacred repertoire is reflective of the seasons of the Christian calendar. They are proud to have been asked to participate in tonight’s Concert. The Lord is My Shepherd is a lyrical setting of the twenty-third Psalm. Its rich scoring, added note harmony and enharmonic modulations and the jazz influences of the middle section are notable features of Will Todd’s music. It was composed as part of Todd’s Te Deum which was originally performed by a choir of one hundred and twenty school children in Guildford Cathedral.
JUNIOR GIRLS’ VOICES Benj Pasek and Justin Paul The Other Side The JGV Band Director: Mr Richard Hare
Junior Girls’ Voices channels the energy and team spirit of First and Second Form girls into singing together and begins their musical lives at RGS - many of them will go on in years to come to be members of the many more senior groups. The choir sings an eclectic mix of folk and contemporary classical music, musical theatre, gospel and pop. The Other Side is from the film The Greatest Showman which tells the story of the circus proprietor PT Barnum and his journey from a lonely adolescence working as a tailor to worldwide success as the head of the famed Barnum’s circus. The Other Side comes at the point in the film where Barnum (Hugh Jackman) is trying to broaden the appeal of his circus among the more gentrified classes of New York by trying to convince a playwright, played by Zac Efron, to come on board with the venture. The song evokes thoughts about escaping from the mundanity of ‘the same old part you gotta play’ and coming over to the ‘other side’ – the freedom of creating something new.
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RGS CHORUS Queen We Will Rock You Too Much Love Will Kill You The Show Must Go On Love Of My Life We Are The Champions The RGS Band Director: Mrs Tali Glynne-Jones
Choral singing has always been a strength at Reigate Grammar School and the breadth of choirs reflects this. The groups range from unauditioned choirs, open to all, to Polyphony, the senior chamber choir who regularly sing in major churches and cathedrals alongside secular recitals. Recent highlights of the choral calendar include visits from internationally renowned baritone, Simon Keenlyside; conductor Nigel Short and his choir Tenebrae; and choral tours of English cathedrals and Tuscany. Upcoming events include an evensong at Guildford Cathedral and junior singers performing John Rutter’s Mass for the Children at the Leith Hill Festival, in front of the composer himself. Queen formed in 1970 and by the early 1980s were probably the biggest stadium rock band in the world. Embracing a plethora of styles and theatrical performances, with number one albums including A Night at the Opera and News of the World, Queen has sold over one hundred and fifty million records. Queen’s songs range from sadness to defiance, humour to exultation and the massed choirs of Reigate Grammar School bring the concert to a close with five of them, ending in a rousing rendition of We are the Champions.
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PERFORMERS Listed in alphabetical order. Correct at time of going to print.
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Violin 1
Violoncello
Clarinet
Anna Anderson (Leader) Juliet Anderson Gabriele Brasaite Bertie Coomber Sophia Herbert Lauren Purves
Emeline Forton Theo Hallett Yasmin Herbert Matthew Oxtoby Eleanor Medcalf Ms Naomi Zoob
Lucy Bushell Barnaby Collins Janith Gabrielsen Alby Lau Gemma Tarrant
Violin 2
Double Bass
Lauren Cockerill Olivia Mulligan
Rosalind Anderson Freya Biggs Fraser Cadman Louis Chambers Seoyun Choi Sheen Dullo Ruby Eustace Carlotta Foster Akshi Gupta Sereena Pallana Alexander Pistell Rosalyn Spindlove Miranda Sturt Mr Adrian Charlesworth
Viola
Ella Herbert Miss Joanna Patrick
Aaron Gilchrist Esther Wigley Mr Jonathan Moss
Flute
Isabel Ainsworth Lucia Dunn-Flores Sophie Harding Matteo Villa
Oboe
Ignacio Cano Josie Wakefield
Trombone
Lakith Gabrielsen Mr Howard Beagley Mr Doug Logan
Bassoon
French Horn Polly Anderson David Hamer Olivia Hickman Callum Scott
Trumpet
Bernadette Cheng-Whitehead Freya MacTavish Milo Stephens
Percussion
Amelia Dean Jake Harper Taylor Stannard Joanna Welsh Mr Mike Osborn
SWING BAND Saxophone
Lucia Dunn-Flores Sophia Herbert Annabel Lloyd Finlay Nasskau Ben Silverman Gemma Tarrant
Trumpet
Piano
Yasmin Herbert Milo Stephens
Eleanor Medcalf
Trombone
Mr Jonathan Moss
Lakith Gabrielsen Mr Howard Beagley Mr Doug Logan
Bass
Drums
Mr Mike Osborn
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CONCERT BAND Flute
Isabel Ainsworth Jemima Brooke Lucia Dunn-Flores Sophie Harding Zachary Smith
Trombone
Lakith Gabrielsen Mr Howard Beagley Mr Doug Logan
Percussion Amelia Dean Joanna Welsh
Oboe
Ignacio Cano Josie Wakefield
Clarinet
Amelia Bright Lucy Bushell Barnaby Collins Janith Gabrielsen Keela McCullen Gemma Tarrant
Bassoon
Lauren Cockerill Olivia Mulligan
Saxophone
Rebecca Heath Sophia Herbert Annabel Lloyd Finlay Nasskau Ben Silverman
French Horn David Hamer
Trumpet
Hugo Goodwill Yasmin Herbert Liam Jones Freya MacTavish Milo Stephens Oliver Yalden
SPRING ORCHESTRA Violin
Neyha Kamaluddin (Leader) Rosalind Anderson Gabriele Brasaite Imogen Chambers Simeon Dayo-Somefun Florence Gold Sophia Herbert Ailsa Leeson Isabel Meredith Mr Adrian Charlesworth
Bassoon
Lauren Cockerill
Violoncello
Theo Hallett Yasmin Herbert Olivia Holden Ms Naomi Zoob
Double Bass
Esther Wigley Mr Jonathan Moss
Flute
Isabel Ainsworth Rebekah Bongers Eloise Hamilton Anusha Kansagra Mason Lau Leila Nicholson Zachary Smith
Clarinet
Janith Gabrielsen Alby Lau Isobel Roberts
Saxophone
Genevieve Hamilton Oscar Harman Miranda Sturt
Oboe
Ignacio Cano Rosa Hennessy Aurelia Nadal Josie Wakefield
Trumpet
Thomas Elkeles Oscar Goodwill Joshua Guest Milo Stephens Oliver Sturt
Trombone
Lakith Gabrielsen Mr Howard Beagley Mr Doug Logan
Percussion
Aaditya Chitre Gautam Chitre Jake Harper Bethany Ramsden Taylor Stannard Mr Mike Osborn
Viola
Ella Herbert Mrs Joanna Patrick
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CHINTHURST SCHOOL CHOIR Daisy Alexander James Briggs Thomas Briggs Oliver Burton Charlie Caldecott Dominik Clarke Lucas Davies Robbie Davison Annalise Dixon
Annie Gadd Jake Gadd Elizabeth Hauff Max Khuleshov Niamh Maddick Kaylen Patel Isabella Quayle Luca Scammels George Sharman
Hugo Smith Jessica Smith William Stockhausen Toby Street Asher Warshawski Alice WIlliams Theo Wooden
MICKLEFIELD SCHOOL SENIOR CHOIR Polly Anderson Leila Baker Leane Beukes Eleanor Brown Evangeline Butler Filippe D’Avillez Mattao Eser Olivia Gibbon George Greensmith Jack Griffin
Lily-Anna Harvey Grace Isaac Jai Kamaluddin Max Kersey Hamish Latty Dennison Hannah Lidbury Anna McWilliams Aofie McKay Isabella Molinari Bertie Morgan
Jake Mulrenan Sophia O’Hara Matthew Oxtoby Ethan Paterson Evie Rotheram Alexander Sherry Gabrielle Toone Joshua Walker
RGS GODFREY SEARLE CHOIR Hannah Brewer Zara Brotzel James Chan Edward Collins Aaron Delafaille Lizzie Fisher Eibhlin Gibbs
Maebh Gibbs Ruari Gibbs Emmeline Halliwell Georgia Hill Matthew Howard Tyra Litten Billy Radford
Grace Ramsden Peter Rochford Benjamin Royal Zachary Smith Joseph Stevens Matthew Tracy Pietro Villa
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JUNIOR GIRLS’ VOICES Aaliyah Anderson Kaitlyn Bolger Rebekah Bongers Imogen Chambers Anusha Datta Annabel Dent Maddie Dent Sophie Featherstone Grace Fowler Caitlyn Fraser Esmé Frith Mollie Fulcher Eibhlin Gibbs Grace Goodenough Amelia Grant Jemima Hain Eloise Hamilton Ella Herbert
Georgia Hill Lili Hughes Annie Jones Eloise Joukador Neyha Kamaluddin Anusha Kansagra Kanika Kirupakaran Ailsa Leeson Eva Marsh Ellen McLeod Yoli Meurisse Sofia Micallef Emma Moncur Olivia Mulligan Aurelia Nadal Joan Orukele Julia Panova Grace Pederson
Diya Phukan Ria Pierre Grace Ramsden Isobel Roberts Isabella Rotheram Ella Sanderson Hannah Savill Amelia South Charlotte Springett Miranda Sturt Maariyah Syed Emma Tansley Ellie Thomas Liberty Tiley Josie Wakefield Rebecca Whittle Carly Withers
JGV BAND Violin
Miranda Sturt
Guitar
Henry Forton Jack Roberts
Bass
Estuardo del Angel
Drums
Taylor Stannard
Piano
Daniel Collins
RGS BAND Violin
Gabriele Brasaite
Cello
Eleanor Medcalf
Lead Guitar
Thomas Kavanagh
Bass Guitar
Estuardo del Angel
Piano
Milo Stephens
Synthesiser Alex Pistell
Drums
Mr Mike Osborn
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RGS CHORUS Aaliyah Anderson Anna Anderson Juliet Anderson Rosalind Anderson Charlotte Bader Grace Beglan Freya Biggs Kaitlyn Bolger Rebekah Bongers Kathryn Boyd Gabriele Brasaite Hannah Brewer Zara Brotzel James Chan Charlotte Chinery Lauren Cockerill Barnaby Collins Edward Collins Archie Collins Bertie Coomber Anusha Datta Amelie Davies Amelia Dean
Aaron Delafaille Annabel Dent Maddie Dent Gayathri Desikan Annabelle Douse Camille Du Buisson Sheen Dullo Sophie Emmerton Sophie Featherstone Lizzie Fisher Emeline Forton Henry Forton Mia Forton Grace Fowler Caitlyn Fraser EsmĂŠ Frith Mollie Fulcher Jacob Garcia Eibhlin Gibbs Maebh Gibbs Ruari Gibbs Freddy Gill Guy Gillespie Grace Goodenough
Amelia Grant Akshi Gupta Jayden Gygax Jemima Hain Emmeline Halliwell Cecily Hamilton Eloise Hamilton Genevieve Hamilton Sophie Harding Ella Herbert Sophia Herbert Yasmin Herbert Georgia Hill Lavinia Horsfall Matthew Howard Lili Hughes Jana Jaafar Mais Jaafar Annie Jones Mark Jones Eloise Joukador Neyha Kamaluddin Sam Kelly Kanika Kirupakarun
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Ailsa Leeson Tyra Litten Annabel Lloyd Ben Mackison Freya MacTavish Calum Maddick Eva Marsh Harriette Massey Ellen McLeod Eleanor Medcalf Isabel Meredith Caspar Meurisse Yoli Meurisse Sofia Micallef Luke Morris Alex Mowat Eleanor Muller Olivia Mulligan Aurelia Nadal Tomos Nutt Joan Orukele Harry Packham Joshua Packham Sereena Pallana
Julia Panova Grace Pederson Diya Phukan Ria Pierre Jemima Potter Lauren Purves Billy Radford Grace Ramsden India Rawlinson Isobel Roberts Peter Rochford Isabella Rotheram Benjamin Royal Ella Sanderson Beth Savill Hannah Savill Joseph Scaglione Freya Shaylor Tom Shepherd Eleanor Short Ben Silverman Zachary Smith Amelia South Rosalyn Spindlove
Charlotte Springett Taylor Stannard Emma Starbuck Milo Stephens Joseph Stevens Miranda Sturt Maariyah Syed Emma Tansley Gemma Tarrant Krishne Thevarajah Ellie Thomas Charlotte Thompson Liberty Tiley Matthew Tracy Goya Verity Harry Verity Pietro Villa Josie Wakefield Ava Warriner Rebecca Whittle Esther Wigley Carly Withers Samantha Wolsey
Reigate Grammar School, Reigate Road, Reigate, Surrey RH2 0QS 01737 222231 info@reigategrammar.org reigategrammar.org @rgs_music | @ReigateGrammar | @rgs_rgsheadmaster