The Apex Singers – Christmas with the Apex Singers – Live Review

The Yard, Manchester

Tuesday 9 December 2025

*****

Christmas magic comes early to Manchester with joyful singing and a party atmosphere

The Apex Singers. Photo Harry Proctor

On another unseasonably warm evening in early December, we packed into one of Manchester’s newest (and warmest!) venues, The Yard in the Cheetham area of Manchester, for a Christmas concert by the Apex Singers.

The support act on Tuesday was Ardú, who describe themselves as ‘Ireland’s premier a cappella vocal band.’ Their name means to raise up, inspire or elevate. Despite having a terrible journey from Dublin via Heathrow, the three women and three men of the band, singing from memory, managed to do just that in a short but compelling set.

All the arrangements were made by their music director, Ciarán Kelly, beginning with a gorgeous, intricate version of O Holy Night. The song Galileo by the Irish singer-songwriter Declan O’Rourke was an attractive ballad with a light tenor solo, the singers swaying gently and smiling at each other. The song ended with a lovely falsetto line, like fine wine.

Longing for home in Ireland inspired a gentle, lilting arrangement of the song Carrickfergus, sung in lovely, pure tones and with a superb blend of voices. The band released it during lockdown, during the ‘Famous Plague’ (as they described it), and their performance at Carrickfergus Castle featured in the Last Night of the Proms in 2021.

In their last song, Fire, the band demonstrated their versatility, singing in a more strident style to suit the nightmare of waiting for Santa to arrive, worrying about the weather. The band sang with urgency and passion, and supreme confidence. After such an excellent but short set and such a stressful journey, it was a relief to hear that the band had another gig booked for the following day, Songs from Ireland – Holiday Edition at The International Anthony Burgess Foundation in Manchester.

As the six members of Ardú left the stage, they were immediately replaced by the eight Apex Singers, although there were often only six singers on stage later in the concert. The Singers performed songs from their new album, Kvällen, which means evening in Swedish, but opened with an older song, Da Ia Da from their previous album Woven. The song was composed by the choir’s Founder and Artistic Director, Ollie Lambert. This was a lovely wordless vocalise (we were told ‘it’s a joy to listen to, but the lyrics need more work’). The piece has an attractive melody, with lovely falling harmonies.

Soprano Lydia Wonham introduced the first piece for Christmas (well, Advent), O Come O Come Emmanuel, which dates back to a Latin version, Veni, veni, Emmanuel, first sung by monks around 1,200 years ago. Apparently, Lambert bought 271 candles from Primark for the music video, but fortunately failed to set fire to the cameraman (no one wants a repeat of the cover of Pink Floyd’s 1975 album Wish You Were Here, in which the late Ronnie Rondell Jr was famously set on fire). The piece began in unison, which soon flowered into close harmony, in a stunning arrangement by Lambert that did catch fire. A Lambert original (the first one he wrote for the Singers) followed. Stopping by the Woods featured a pure-voiced tone from Wonham, a gently syncopated rhythm, and a sweet offbeat solo from George Lowe.

The cover of Kvällen by the Apex Singers

Two tracks from the new album, Kvällen, followed. Suo Gân, a Welsh lullaby, was soporific (in a good way), with beautifully poised singing from alto Issie Turner, who was new to the choir on this tour. The lower voices of the choir took up the tune in barbershop style. In complete contrast, and demonstrating the choir’s versatility, they sang the Croatian song Nevijska Kolenda in an invigorating, robust style led by tenor Douglass Lloyd, depicting a Christmas festival with bonfires (was a pyromaniac theme developing here?).

A feature of the choir is their warm-hearted and witty spoken introductions to the songs, and they were on fire (sorry) on Tuesday. Bass Elliott Maxwell-Hodkinson introduced Ye Banks and Braes, with words by no less a poet than Robert Burns, as a story about an abandoned woman who was ‘really miffed’ about being left literally holding the baby. George told us they believed an Irishman who said Wild Mountain Thyme doesn’t grow in Ireland, only to find out it’s the most prolific wild plant there!

Two highlights in the first half were: a jolly version of It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year, with an American-inflected solo by tenor Douglas Lloyd and virtuosic backing vocals; and The Fox with a busy, complex arrangement carried off with supreme aplomb. There were several solos in the latter song, which is over 500 years old; all the choir members felt very comfortable singing them. In the final piece of the half, the Swedish hymn, Ett barn är fött på denna dag, (A Child is Born on this Day) singers from the choral workshop earlier in the day, and members of Ardú, joined the lovely chromatic harmonies, while Lydia Wonham provided a pure coloratura soprano above.

Lydia Wonham, Nia Edwards and Douglas Lloyd. Photo Harry Proctor

The second half began with a very different version of Fairytale of New York, so well known for the distinctive vocals of Shane MacGowan and Kirsty MacColl. It was slightly startling to hear the words ‘You scumbag, you maggot’ sung so beautifully by Issie Turner; the song, in a lovely arrangement by Lambert, sounded more like a Christmas carol despite the brutal nature of the words. Michael Colman asked us if we were having a good time; we replied that we were (it was true). He thought that was ‘frankly excellent news’ (it was).

More lovely songs from the new album followed: the Catalan carol/lullaby El Noi de la Mare (The Child of the Mother), sung in a gentle waltz time. As George sang the simple tune with ardent honesty, they were surrounded by a halo of sound. The French classic Noël Nouvelet featured a jazzy arrangement that evoked Jacques Loussier‘s jazz versions of JS Bach’s music. A false ending drew some premature applause, then a very enthusiastic reaction when we realised it was safe to applaud.

Elliott Maxwell-Hodkinson, Michael Colman, Issie Turner
. Photo Harry Proctor

Another pair of songs from the new album included the Spanish lullaby A la Nanita Nana, with warmly idiomatic singing by alto Nia Edwards. There was a thrilling contrast in The Christmas Goose, a Mancunian folk song with saucy lyrics, featuring a funky bass line and solos throughout the group. Lydia Wonham commented that the song was about going to a pub and ending up with a baby: ‘we’ve all been there.’ Well, quite.

After unusual but exquisite arrangements of White Christmas and Hushabye Mountain, the choir started to get a bit giddy with the joy of singing such complicated versions so well. They decided to take a selfie, inviting us all to squeeze in (we did our best). This was Nia Edwards’ last show, so the choir gave her parting gifts, and a party atmosphere broke out on stage.

The Apex Singers at The Yard. Photo Harry Proctor

We had reached the end of the show with (appropriately) The Parting Glass, which began with a moving, contemplative duet from alto Nia Edwards and soprano Eva Jones. The final words, ‘Good night and joy be to you all’, rang true. The evening ended with an encore, a heartfelt version of Auld Lang Syne, which brought new meaning to the words that are often mumbled and forgotten when sung in other contexts.

So ended another delightful evening with the Apex Singers. It would not be easy to find another ensemble as happy to perform together. Their joyful singing and warmth washed over the audience, embracing us, and they wore their virtuosity very lightly. The atmosphere was relaxed and intimate, and they made very genial hosts. Lambert’s skilful arrangements took us around the world and to different eras, but always with his unique stamp. Christmas came early to Manchester this year.

Performers

Ardú

The Apex Singers:
Lydia Wonham, Eva Jones soprano
Nia Edwards, Issie Turner alto
Douglas Lloyd, Michael Colman tenor
George Lowe, Elliott Maxwell-Hodkinson bass

Ollie Lambert Founder & Artistic Director

This review was updated at 20.57 on 15 December 2025 to correct a few minor factual errors.

Read on…

Southwell Music Festival 2025 Day Two – Young Artist Series and Festival Folk – Live Review 

Telyn Quartet 
Southwell Methodist Church 

The Telyn Quartet. Photo: Sophie Williams

The Telyn Quartet (Tabitha Appel, Alma Vink, Isobel Neary-Adams, Seth Collin) is a young string quartet based in the UK, comprising students of David Takeno, Arisa Fujita and Louise Hopkins. They have received coaching from members of the Brodsky Quartet, the Lindsay Quartet and the London Haydn Quartet. They are currently on the professional mentorship scheme ChamberStudio UK. They appeared at the Southwell Music as String Apprentices. They take their name from ‘telyn’, which means ‘harp’ in Welsh. This is because Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 10, Op. 74, nicknamed ‘The Harp’, was the first piece they properly worked on as a quartet, at the Wye Valley summer residency in Wales.

As might be expected from their CV, the quartet played with youthful exuberance, enjoyment, and remarkable precision. Their choice of opening piece was therefore highly appropriate, Benjamin Britten’s Three Divertimenti, written when the composer was only 20. The quartet made a vigorous start to the opening march with lovely ensemble, ebullient playing, and incredible concentration. They smiled gently at each other as they played. They played the second movement, a relaxed Waltz in a lovely romantic style. There was a lightness of touch as they brought out the themes beautifully. The final movement, a burlesque, began with frenzied strings and precise playing, bringing out the serendipitous nature of the piece. After an explosive climax, the music returned to the fizzing frenzy of the start. The sudden ending brought indulgent, amused applause.

Elizabeth Maconchy (1907 – 1994) deserves to be better known. She was the first woman to chair the Composers Guild of Great Britain and became President of the Society for the Promotion of New Music when Britten died in 1976. She was made Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1987. She wrote 13 string quartets, the subject of a Listening Service on BBC Radio 3, and she was Composer of the Week in 2024. Yet it appears that her complete string quartets have only been recorded once. So it was good to hear the Telyns performing her String Quartet No. 4. The viola player Isobel Neary-Adams introduced the work, which is in four movements but was played as one continuous movement: ‘It’s fast, but you’ll know when we get to the end.’ The music was tightly structured, based on a single short theme, reminiscent of Shostakovich’s use of the short DSCH theme in his string quartets. The most obvious musical influence is Bartók, but Maconchy has her own voice in the fierce debate between the fractured themes. The Telyns expertly illustrated the composer’s statement, ‘for me, the best music is an impassioned argument.’ They ended the piece with ecstatic joy, with a romantic melody on the first violin.

The Telyn Quartet. Photo: Sophie Williams

After a brief tuning break, the quartet returned with a much better-known piece, Ravel’s String Quartet in F Major. Cellist Seth Collin introduced it as part of the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of the composer’s birth. He said that the colours and textures of the piece were novel for the time; in this performance, the Telyns brought out both these elements superbly. The piece still sounds intensely modern, although not in an avant-garde sense. The opening movement had moments of serene joy and passionate ecstasy, with much more impressionistic imagery than in the previous two pieces. The quartet played with poise and passion. In the second movement, the quartet explored the considerable range of Ravel’s invention and restless harmonies. They controlled the dynamics beautifully, and there was a remarkable range of orchestral textures and colours from just four players. The third movement began with a pensive viola theme and heart-stoppingly beautiful key changes. The quartet built up a magical atmosphere which gradually morphed into a nostalgic restatement of the main theme. A downward motif from the cello brought us into a glittering new world, with lovely legato playing at the end. The final movement featured fiercely rhythmic playing, but we were never far from a moment of joy. The audience applauded warmly at the end and seemed reluctant to let the quartet leave. Hopefully, we will see a lot more of this fine young quartet in the future.

Performers
The Telyn Quartet 
Tabitha Appel violin 
Alma Vink violin 
Isobel Neary-Adams viola 
Seth Collin cello 

Elizabeth Machonchy. Photo 1938 by Howard Coster. Public Domain/Wikimedia Commons

Repertoire 
Benjamin Britten Three Divertimenti 
Elizabeth Maconchy String Quartet No. 4
Maurice Ravel String Quartet in F Major 


Kathryn Tickell & The Darkening
The Nave, Southwell Minster

Amy Thatcher, Kathryn Tickell and Joe Truswell

Kathyrn Tickell is folk music royalty. She has been performing for 40 years and has been awarded an OBE and the Queen’s Medal for Music. She won the BBC Radio 2 Folk Musician of the Year twice. She was joined on Saturday by her band, The Darkening. The band takes its name from an old Northumbrian word for twilight, celebrating Tickell’s Northumbrian heritage as a piper and fiddle player. Her band on Saturday were Amy Thatcher on accordion, Tim Bloomer on guitar, Joe Truswell on drums and Stef Connor on vocals and lyres. Tickell’s pipe and fiddle playing was magnificent throughout, sometimes spiky and baroque, sometimes wailing and banshee-like, sometimes verging on progressive rock (a good thing in the opinion of this blog!) Tickell was a relaxed and compelling presence, taking care to introduce the songs and put them in context. 

An early highlight was Caelestis, which Tickell said was based on a Latin inscription on Hadrian’s Wall. Tickell said she was surprised to discover that the wall was Roman, and multicultural as it had drawn soldiers from Europe, North Africa, Syria and Lebanon. The song was equally multicultural, with a Middle Eastern-sounding theme on guitar and pipes. There was a vocal duet between Thatcher, with a lovely contralto voice, and Conner with a light soprano voice, creating a spectral atmosphere. 

Tickell celebrated much more recent Northumbrian history in The Waltz, which harked back to her grandfather’s family dancing tradition. Thatcher provided a splendid clog dance with intricate steps, sometimes almost leaving the ground. Tickell then asked the audience if you could dance in a church. The audience seemed to think that you could. She invited the audience to sing along with the chorus of In My Northumbria, which celebrated Northumbria’s good and bad points, depending on what weather you prefer. The song ended with a gorgeous a cappella trio of the three female voices. A more poignant event in Northumbrian history was referenced in Sycamore Gap, a mournful lament for the loss of the tree on Hadrian’s Wall that was chopped down by vandals in 2023. Tickell said curlews nested near the tree, and Joe Truswell triggered samples of the birds as an evocative backdrop. It was easy to imagine Tickell as a lone piper, playing at the gap where the tree once stood: a haunting image and song. 

Sycamore Gap Tree in Northumberland. Source: Wikimedia Commons

The second half began with a coup de théâtre, Tickell processing in from the back of the Minster playing her pipes. Six women from Festival Voices joined her in Stef Conner’s stunning arrangement of Blow the Wind Southerly. Women’s voices surrounded us as they gradually processed to the stage. At the end, the audience breathed a sigh of pleasure to mark a truly special moment. ‘I knew I was going to cry, ’ Tickell said. The women of Festival Voices also sang the world premiere of a new piece that Conner had written for the occasion, with words translated from the Old English poem The Ruin. This was a spellbinding performance of a poem that reminds us how fragile we are, and how great rulers and empires can crumble to dust. This sentiment is expressed in Shelley’s poem Ozymandias. Just Stop and Eat the Roses was a melancholy instrumental that became more joyful, reminding us to stop and smile when we aren’t quite feeling right. Tickell and Thatcher wrote One Night in Moaña after attending a festival in Galicia, Spain. The piece describes the traditional Muiñeira dance in 6/8 time and begins with a sliding scale representing musicians tuning. Conner demonstrated the shout used to activate the musicians, something like ‘Yee-hee-hee-hee-hee.’ Some of the audience were activated, too, clapping and whooping along. The concert ended with a stirring rendition of O-U-T Spells Out. Tickell explained that she had ‘clagged together’ some children’s rhymes to form a chant. She had meant it in all innocence, but she invited the audience to join in and consider it a call to throw out racism and intolerance. The concert had certainly felt inclusive, welcoming to both hardened folk fans and the folk curious. It was a wonderful evening. 

Performers
Kathryn Tickell Northumbrian smallpipes, fiddle, vocals
Amy Thatcher accordion, synth, clogs, vocals
Tim Bloomer guitar
Joe Truswell drums
Stef Conner vocals, lyres


Click here for a review of the First Day of the Festival

Southwell Music Festival 2024 Day Four: Surround Sounds No. 3: Turned in the Light

Southwell Minster

Monday 26 August 2024

09.00 Chapter House, Southwell Minster
Gemma Bass (violin), Graham South (trumpet, flugelhorn), Judy Louie Brown (mezzo soprano), Marcus Farnsworth (baritone)

The stalls and canopies of the Chapter House of Southwell Minster
The stalls and canopies of the Chapter House of Southwell Minster. Source Wikimedia Commons

At 9.00 on a quiet Bank Holiday Monday, a small crowd of musical pilgrims journeyed to the Chapter House of Southwell Minster to hear an intimate concert by the indefatigable Marcus Farnsworth and three of his musical friends. As the sun illuminated the ornate stonework of the early 14th architectural marvel that is the Chapter House, the capacity audience inhabited the edges of the room while the musicians sat in the middle, facing each other like members of a string quartet. The concert featured five traditional English folk songs, sung fairly ‘straight’ by Farnsworth, whose baritone was gorgeously rich and deep. He was sometimes joined by Scottish mezzo soprano Judy Louie Brown, who brought a dignity, purity and smiling serenity to duets with Farnsworth.

Around the two singers, musicians Graham South and Gemma Bass (whose music we heard in Cathedrals of Sound last Friday) wove beguiling spells of improvisation, drawing from jazz, blues, the avant-garde, folk and minimalism. The concert began with Lemady, a song from Norfolk, which included the apt line, ‘early in the morning at the break of day.’ Offstage, Bass played folk tunes while South played soft-grained flugel-horn, almost like a human voice, with virtuosic, jazzy runs. Bass provided the folky melody to the Becks and Brooks, which takes words from the nature writer Robert Macfarlane, while Farnsworth and Brown sang a close-harmony duet. The two singers and violinist sparkled in this jaunty, syncopated song. An audience member muttered ‘wow!’ at the end. Well, quite.

The Entrance to the Chapter House
The entrance to the Chapter House. Image from Southwell Minster’s The Leaves of Southwell project

The Trees They Grow So High was a showcase for South, with stunning trumpet playing, at times florid, declamatory, bluesy, mellow, jazzy and keening. It was also a reminder that even great musicians are human – Bass smilingly improvised while South left the stage, and he candidly revealed afterwards that he forgotten his music. The song ended badly for the protagonist (as they often do), ‘my love is dead’, while South blew hollow notes down his trumpet and Bass played spooky high notes, a spine-chilling moment. The Young and Single Sailor was another vocal duet, arranged by Bass with a minimalist, looping violin motif. The four performers merged, become a single musical entity, relaxed and smiling, communicating their joy in shared music making. Farnsworth said the Festival has created this kind of musical collaboration – both Bass and South have worked with him at the Festival for around the full decade it has existed. The concert ended with a very witty arrangement of The Lincolnshire Poacher, with violin and trumpet providing a syncopated, avant-garde but jolly accompaniment, sometimes wandering off completely from Farnsworth’s resolute singing of the tune. A joyful ending to a superb concert and indeed to the Festival itself.

The Apex Singers – Live Review

The Apex Singers performing at Waterside Arts, Sale, Manchester

Friday 24 May 2024

Waterside Arts Centre, Sale, Greater Manchester

*****

A delightful evening of gorgeous a cappella singing

The Apex Singers performing at Waterside Arts, Sale, Manchester

The Apex Singers are a Manchester-based chamber choir of eight voices, founded and directed by Ollie Lambert. Unfortunately, one of the tenors was ill at short notice so last Friday’s stunning a cappella performance at Waterside Arts Centre in Sale was given by seven singers. This meant a lot of last-minute re-arranging and rehearsing to close the gap, but it was done so seamlessly that it was impossible to tell what musical surgery had been done. The choir was helped by the fact that many of the arrangements are for smaller forces, but more importantly by the fact that all the singers are confident soloists who can easily hold a line.

One of the most striking aspects of the performance was that Lambert wasn’t in evidence on stage, but the choir was able to start each song without a conductor or even a starting note. It turned out that Lambert himself was still in control, like some benign deus ex machina from an ancient Greek drama, providing a feed into each singer’s ear with the starting note of each piece, a short click track count-in and even the name of the song to avoid accidents. Each singer was amplified, so he was also providing a well-balanced sound mix. But the singers themselves did most of the work, singing all the complex arrangements without music (although some of the arrangements have been published), listening intently to each other to create superb ensemble singing.

It’s difficult to categorise the Apex Singers, which is perhaps the point. There’s sometimes an element of the Swingle Singers in the arrangements, but Lambert tends to focus more on the folky aspects of the original songs while adding some lovely ornamentation. It’s fascinating to compare the Apex Singers’ version of The Wayfaring Stranger with the much more florid version by The Swingle Singers:

The Wayfaring Stranger performed by The Apex Singers
Poor Wayfaring Stranger performed by The Swingle Singers

Lambert’s arrangements retain the songs’ emotional honesty and directness, while tickling the intellect with their imagination and musicality. The singers tread a course between a classical chamber choir and folksingers, limiting the amount of vibrato in each voice and not venturing into historically informed folk performance, creating a thoroughly engaging listen.

Most of the songs came from the choir’s first two studio albums, Hiraeth (2020) and Stravaig (2022), although there were a few tasters from the Singers’ forthcoming album Woven, the first of entirely original compositions. The choir’s aim is to bring lesser-known repertoire to the public, which they certainly achieve, but highlights from the first half included a gorgeously chromatic arrangement of Scarborough Fair, opening with a honey-voiced solo from tenor Matthew Burns. There was beautiful close harmony in The Banks of The Roses, and an amusing debate after the song as whether the Scottish or Irish version of the song had more bloodshed! In Down to the River to Pray, Katie Emanuel revealed a soulful voice with a gospel tinge. The first half ended with a moving sequence, starting with a new composition, Hollow, a collaboration between Lambert and alto Niamh Feeney drawn from their shared experience of sadly losing grandparents. This was followed by the contemplative, folky Twenty Bold Mariners. The final song was another new piece by Lambert, Da la Da, a song without words using phonics only. The Singers were joined for this by several singers from the audience who had taken part in a workshop earlier that day. The soprano Lydia Wonham introduced it as a piece for ‘dancing in a meadow’. The new song had a lovely, lilting falling melody and chromatic harmony, making it a perfect fit for the folk song arrangements we heard earlier.

The second half began with a lively version of Leaving of Liverpool with an appealing solo from George Lowe. At one point the singers sang in unison which was an almost visceral shock after hearing their voices weave around each other. The singers also began to relax more in the second half, chatting to the audience and with each other, talking about fish and chips and asking if anyone was from Urmston. It became increasingly difficult to pick out highlights from the 10-song set. But of particular note was the French Love Song Montagne Que Tu Es Haute sung in immaculate French by the four sopranos and altos, passing the melody around, with achingly beautiful harmonies, and – appropriately – a touch of the French composer Francis Poulenc. The next song Homeward Bound – the first arrangement Lambert completed for the choir – had a touch of the English composers of the choral tradition such as Vaughan Williams. The choir ably negotiated the twisting harmonies and key changes, remaining in perfect tune. A new version of Golden Slumbers featured a looping technique. The perfect loop has to be recorded, via the mixing desk, so the singers can accompany themselves – even the slightest glitch can ruin the loop. Apparently, it took three attempts to create a loop in Lancaster earlier in the week, but this time it passed without incident, turning voices into electronic instruments. The set ended with an elegiac farewell, the poignant song The Parting Glass leaving us with a pensive final chord. Fortunately there was a very ‘unexpected’ encore, a jolly version of The Rambling Rover which brought enthusiastic applause. The only slight disappointment was that the venue wasn’t full – the choir deserve to be playing to packed houses. They deliver Lambert’s attractive arrangements of memorable melodies with excellent choral ensemble work, warmth and chemistry between the singers, lovely solos and an engaging sense of humour. This was a delightful evening, the end of their latest tour – hopefully we will get to hear them performing live again soon.

Performers

Lydia Wonham, soprano

Sophie Proctor, soprano

Katie Emanuel, alto

Niamh Feeney, alto

Matthew Burns, tenor

George Lowe, bass

Elliot Maxwell-Hodkinson, bass

Ollie Lambert, founder, artistic director and arranger