News & Recent Engagements
[Recent press articles by and about Howard can be found here]
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Howard was Kirsty Young's Desert Island Discs Castaway on Sunday 25th May, on BBC Radio 4
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Howard has been announced as Classic FM's Composer in Residence for 2008-9 and presents a weekly show on Saturdays at 13.00, Howard Goodall On....
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Howard's new BBC Radio 2 series, Howard Goodall's Class Acts, featuring exceptional young musicians in British schools & arts colleges will be aired from early September
On June 26th he was honoured with an Honorary Doctorate of Arts by the University of Bolton
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Release date: September 2008 on CD: 5099921504723 and digital download: 5099921504754
**coming soon** www.eternallightrequiem.com
September 28th see the release of the EMI Classics Recording of Howard's Eternal Light: A Requiem, for soloists, choir, keyboards & strings, commissioned by London Musici, published by Faber Music. It will also be performed in a dance version by the Rambert Dance Company on tour in the UK during the Autumn & Winter, choreographed by Mark Baldwin, designed by Michael Howells. The choir is Christ Church Cathedral Oxford, directed by Stephen Darlington. Soloists on the EMI CD are Alfie Boe, Natasha Marsh and Christopher Maltman.
EMI Classics page announcing Eternal Light: A Requiem
Rambert Dance Company web page on Eternal Light
Rambert Dance Company PRESS RELEASE (16th June 2008) announcing Eternal Light.
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The Hired Man goes to New York: June 5th - 29th Brits Off Broadway festival
The show has received a clean sweep of excellent reviews in New York. Reviews can be found here.
photo: Tristram Kenton
The Hired Man UK tour directed by Daniel Buckroyd New Perspectives Theatre Company from September 07 to March 08
Reviews of this tour can be found on the Hired Man page here.

A new CD of this production can be ordered here.
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The Hired Man revival set in Pembrokeshire, reopened the Torch Theatre Milford Haven in March, after a 2-year refurbishment. It was directed by Peter Doran and was a sell-out.
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Howard's 1986 musical Girlfriends had its Dutch premiere on June 20th at Fontys Hogeschool (Academy), in a Dutch translation by Hans Sleurink, directed by Linda Lepomme, the team responsible for the outstanding 2001 Flanders Royal Ballet production of The Hired Man
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Howard has written a new anthem, Music, Sister of Sunrise, to be performed at the excellent! gala concert at Sadler's Wells Theatre on July 15th. excellent! is a special event to celebrate the Department for Children, Schools and Families’ (DCSF) Music and Dance Scheme, and the achievements of the country’s most talented young dancers and musicians.
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Howard's new commission for Julian Lloyd Webber and the Chipping Campden Music Festival, And the bridge is love, premiered at St James' Church in Chipping Campden on May 21st. Thomas Hull conducted the Festival Academy Orchestra. It is followed by performances at Birmingham Town Hall with students of Birmigham Conservatoire in June, with the Edinburgh Youth Orchestra at Linlithgow (19th August ) Stirling ( 20th August ) and Edinburgh (21st August). A review of it in the Independent can be found here.
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On Tuesday 16th January at the Music Manifesto's State of Play conference at the Roundhouse in Camden Town, Rt Hon Alan Johnson MP, the then Secretary of State for Education & Skills announced Howard's appointment as 'ambassador' for singing in England, with a £10m budget to fund a national singing campaign aimed at primary schools over four years. On November 21st the public aspect of the singing campaign, Sing Up (www.singup.org) was launched, along with announcements by Ed Balls, Secretary of State for Children, Families and Schools, and Lord Adonis, Schools Minister, of the Government's 3-year commitment to music education: a total of £329 million specifically ear-marked for music in schools, including an additional £30m for the National Singing Programme. This is the highest such settlement in British history. More on the National Singing Programme can be found here. Howard gives an update on the programme (Jan 30th) in a short video interview for the Music Manifesto here.
Howard was keynote speaker at the Music Learning Live! conference at The Sage Gateshead on January 30th. The speech can be read in transcription here, or heard on the Music Manifesto site here. He was keynote speaker at the ContinYou conference on March 18th, and the MMA Conference on May 10th.
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Howard's BBC Radio 2 seasonal special, Howard Goodall's Christmas Stocking, was transmitted on Sunday 23rd December. He also made a brief guest appearance in Griff Rhys Jones' BBC ONE programme Charles Dickens & the Invention of Christmas on the same day.
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At a ceremony at the Savoy hotel celebrating Educational Achievement in television on June 11th, Howard was accorded the great honour of the Royal Televison Society's Judges' Award (the final award of the evening) in recognition of a decade of exceptional TV series on music. All 6 series, from Howard Goodall's Organworks to How Music Works, were made by Tiger Aspect Productions for Channel 4. Also present to mark the award were the series' producer-directors David Jeffcock and Frank Hanly, C4 commissioning editor Jan Younghusband, C4 Head of Learning Janey Walker, and Executive producer Paul Sommers.
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The 2006 Voice of the Listener & Viewer Naomi Sargant Memorial Award has been awarded to Howard 'For Outstanding Contribution to Education in Broadcasting'. Jan Younghusband, Commissioning Editor for Arts & Performance at Channel 4 collected this award on Howard’s behalf at a ceremony at the Royal National Hotel on 19th April.
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Howard is also the recipient of the 2007 Making Music/Sir Charles Groves Prize for Outstanding Contribution to British Music. This prestigious prize is now in its 17th year. Previous recipients include The BBC Proms, Classic FM, the Royal Northern College of Music, the Edinburgh International Festival, Birmingham City Council, Joanna McGregor, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Philip Langridge, The Lindsays, and, last year, Glastonbury Festival. Making Music, formerly the National Federation of Music Societies, is the UK's largest organisation supporting and promoting voluntary music-making, with over 2,400 member groups.
All Howard's awards are listed here.
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Howard completed the score for MR BEAN'S HOLIDAY earlier this year and is currently working on a new musical, LOVE STORY, with writer Stephen Clark, based on Erich Segal's best-selling novella, to be produced in 2008.
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At a ceremony on 25th October 2006 at the Savoy Hotel, the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters presented Howard with their coveted Gold Badge Award for exceptional service in support of British composers and songwriters. He was honoured in July with a Doctorate in Music by Bishop Grosseteste University College, Lincoln & the University of Leicester, for outstanding services to music education.
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Howard's musical Days of Hope was revived in a professional production at London's celebrated King's Head Theatre 13th March - 22nd April. The production was directed by TMA Barclays Theatre Award winner Russell Labey and starred David Burt, Siobhan McCarthy, Aimie Atkinson (2006 BBC Radio 2 Voice of Musical Theatre winner), Simon Thomas, Matt Cross, Victoria Yeates & James Russell. The production website with booking details etc is here.
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Howard's The Lord is my shepherd (Psalm 23) is featured on Alfie Boe's new CD onward

Howard's songs for William Shakespeare's As you like it were featured in Samuel West's 2007 production of the play for the Sheffield Crucible, which transferred in March to Stratford-on-Avon as part of the RSC's complete works project.
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2006...

Howard's new Channel 4 series How Music Works, aired on Channel 4 at the end of 2006, to great acclaim. You can go to a dedicated page for this series on this website here, and Channel 4's How Music Works microsite is here. The series was re-run on More4 in December. More4 programme listings are here. How to get the More4 (Freeview) channel click here. A further page of information about the series on this site can be found here. Channel 4 have no plans yet to release the series on DVD, nor is there an accompanying book. Sorry! Howard's award-winning Channel 4 series Howard Goodall's 20th Century Greats was transmitted no less than four times during 2005. All Howard's series are shown regularly in the UK (and anywhere receiving Sky) on the Artsworld channel. Howard Goodall's 20th Century Greats won a Royal Television Society Award for Education. It was also nominated for the 2005 BAFTAs (Huw Weldon Award) and an International Rose d'Or. Further information and press reviews can be found here. News of Howard's other recent awards can be found here.

Howard's most recent CD [CCL CDG 1155] is Winter Lullabies, his song cycle for upper voices and harp, performed by the boys of Christ Church Cathedral Oxford, directed by Stephen Darlington, with star soloist Catrin Finch on harp. It can be ordered here. Winter Lullabies received its live premiere at St John's Smith Square on December 13th 2006.

Winter Lullabies is published by Faber Music and can be ordered here.
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Howard once again co-presented the Music for Youth Schools' Proms at the Royal Albert Hall, November 13-15th, was chief juror for the BBC Choir of the Year finals (broadcast by Radio 3 and BBC FOUR in December) and presented the BBC Radio 2 Young Chorister of the Year from Westminster Abbey on 5th November. In May Howard presented the BBC Young Musician of the Year final from the Sage Gateshead and in August he presented the BBC Promenade Concert featuring the (fabulous) National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain.
Howard wrote a song with Charles Hart for the first Barbican Panto, Dick Whittington & his Cat. From The Sunday Times Culture 10th December:
"....The romantic leads, the thigh-slapping principal boy, Summer Strallen - of the the Dame says, 'we've never had a slapper in the family before' - and her love interest, Alice Fitzwarren (Caroline Sheen), are splendid, in particularly fine tune during the show's best song, Like You, by Howard Goodall and Charles Hart...." [Patricia Nicol]
Howard welcomed the launch of the 2nd Music Manifesto Report, Making every child's music matter, on 18th October. He has been chair of the Vocal Strategy Workstream for the Music Manifesto and Youth Music. Downloadable copies of the report (including Howard's article in it), its recommendations to Government, news and further details can be found at the Music Manifesto website.
Howard's musical Two Cities completed its successful premiere run at the Salisbury Playhouse in October 2006. Joanna Read, who wrote the book, directed a fine young cast. Joanna and Howard are currently working on revisions for a second production of Two Cities, in 2008.
Howard and Charles Hart's musical The Dreaming was revived in July and October by the National Youth Music Theatre.
Currently running TV series for which Howard has composed theme and incidental music are The Catherine Tate Show, Q.I., The Vicar of Dibley, Twelve Books that Changed the World, Seaside Parish, Island Parish.
2005....
Howard's musical written with Nick Stimson, A Winter's Tale, commissioned by The SAGE Gateshead, was performed in December 2005 by a cast and band of young people, to great acclaim.
Howard attended the premiere of a Christmas anthem, Out of the Dark Past, for the choir of King's School Canterbury, in Canterbury Cathedral, on December 14th, directed by Howard Ionascu. The commission was dedicated to the memory of Lucy Holland, a student of the school, who died in the Boxing Day Tsunami.
On Saturday 26th November at LSO St Luke's in London, Howard recorded his BBC Radio 2 Christmas Concert, broadcast on Christmas Day at 10pm. It featured the BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by John Wilson and The London Adventist Chorale, directed by the effervescent Ken Burton. One of the world's leading players, acclaimed Welsh harpist Catrin Finch, performed, as well as 'the world's first choir boyband' The Choir Boys and the versatile, former member of The Swingle Sisters, soprano Joanna Forbes. Joanna sang two world premieres by Howard, The Angel Gabriel and Latin Lullaby. Latin Lullaby was also performed in its full choir version by the choir of Christ Church Cathedral Oxford at carol concerts in London and Oxford.
Howard was the featured guest on BBC Radio 4's Great Lives on October 21st, choosing the black English composer Samuel Coleridge Taylor as his 'great life' choice.
He wrote a song for Aled Jones' CD New Horizons, on Universal Classics.
Howard also had two tracks, Psalm 23: The Lord is my shepherd (theme from The Vicar of Dibley) and Ecce homo on The Choirboys' debut CD. His Psalm 23: The Lord is my shepherd (theme from The Vicar of Dibley) also featured on two other new CDs, Relaxing Classics from Classic FM, ....and In Dreams, from Sony/BMG's new boy singing star Joseph McManners......as well as on Bryn Terfel's smash hit CD of Popular Classics. The CD, which has won the Classical Brits award for CD of the Year can be ordered from Amazon here. All the above Cds & tracks are also now available on iTunes.
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Premieres of new choral commissions by Howard included a festive anthem Ecce Mater Tua for the Schola Cantorum of the Cathedral of St John, s'Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands (November 6th 2006), Saved (based on Wendy Cope's haunting poem about 9/11) for the Methodist College Belfast's Chapel Choir, in St Anne's Cathedral Belfast (October 27th).
He contributed to a BBC 2 documentary, The Best and Worst of God, presented by Vic Reeves, as an 'expert', and a BBC FOUR documentary about the hymn Jerusalem. The Guardian review of this programme (9th September 2005) read: "This was a lovely film, with lots of good people talking about Jerusalem. Best of all was the composer Howard Goodall, who explained why Jerusalem sounds so English. At the end, it builds to its big climax: "till we have built Jerusalem.." But after that, the tune contracts again, as if we're slightly embarrassed about the patriotism in the previous line. And it comes back down again, almost apologetically: "In England's green and pleasant land." isn't that great?..." (Sam Wollaston)
On Saturday 30th July 2005 Howard hosted an event connected with the BBC Proms on behalf of the Music Manifesto at the Royal Geographical Society. It included an address by Howard, a live performance by members of the National Youth Orchestra and the premiere of a short film Howard made for the Manifesto, Tell Tchaikovsky the news - young musicians embrace the future, commissioned by Marc Jaffrey, the Music Manifesto champion. In May he had been keynote speaker at the Music Manifesto Signatories' conference. His speech at this event can be found here.
Howard was immensely honoured to be a Cultural Ambassador for the successful London 2012 Olympic Bid.
Howard became a Youth Music trustee.
In 2004...

Howard's new work for brass band, Saraswati, for the Smithills School Senior Band and their musical director Chris Wormald, received its world premiere at Bluefield College, West Virginia, on 3rd August 2005, as part of the band's rapturously-received USA Tour. It was recorded live on CD. He first encountered the musicians of Smithills when their Senior Brass Band played at the Albert Hall Schools' Prom in November 2003 and was so knocked out by the excellence, maturity and beauty of their playing that he offered to compose a new work for them. Saraswati is the result. In April 2004 Howard was in Bolton to launch the new Special Performing Arts College Status of Smithills School. He unveiled a plaque celebrating the new chapter in the school's history. A few months later they appeared on his South Bank Show Musical Nation. The Smithills Band performed again at the 2005 Schools Proms
December 2004 saw the opening of the SAGE Gateshead of which he is a proud trustee.
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He presented, with Aled Jones and Petroc Trelawny, the TV and Radio 3 coverage of the BBC Radio 3 Choir of the Year. He worked on two new Vicar of Dibley Christmas and New Year specials for the BBC and an orchestral suite of Red Dwarf, given its world premiere by the Halle Orchestra at Bridgewater Hall in Manchester in October 2004. A new series of the BBC's Q.I. featured Howard's theme music. He also composed music for the second series of the BBC 2's Seaside Parish which began on 28th December 2004 with a special about the Boscastle flood disaster.
In October, at the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith, the Salisbury Playhouse production of Howard & Melvyn Bragg's musical The Hired Man, directed by Joanna Reed, won the TMA Award for Best Musical. This was the first major professional revival in the UK since the late 80s and was received with outstanding reviews. Lynn Gardner's Guardian review of it, for example, can be found here. The Hired Man also enjoyed a sell-out, critically acclaimed run at the Theatre by the Lake, Keswick - the first professional production of the piece in the county of its origin. Amongst many revivals of The Hired Man in 2005 are productions in Whitehaven (the mining town where the Tallentires live in Act 2!) and on Teesside, and the Dutch-language version by the Amersfoortse Muziektheatergroep. Days of Hope was produced at the Northcott Theatre, Exeter, directed by Nick Stimson to great acclaim in June 2004. A production of it is being planned in Dallas, Texas, for 2005, and the Dutch-language version of Days of Hope will be given its premiere by Het Musical Lab at the Werkteater Amsterdam in 2005.
Link to Howard's Musicals page
Howard contributed three new hymn arrangements for the Griffin CD Favourite Hymns from Oxford, sung by the choir of Christ Church Cathedral Oxford, directed by Stephen Darlington. These are Morning has broken, When I survey the wondrous cross, and Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika.
New Publication: Howard's Love divine, in a setting for upper voices, was included in a new Faber collection, 30 Sacred Masterworks. Love divine sits flatteringly alongside Mozart, Beethoven, Byrd, Faure, Palestrina, Schubert and Handel, to name but a few. The 163-page volume is only £10.95 and a pack of 10 is just £89.95. It can be ordered here. Faber Music is also released its male voice choir version (TTBB) of Howard's Psalm 23 (the Vicar of Dibley theme).
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Howard's 1986 musical Girlfriends was performed July 9th to August 1st 2004 at the Arlington National Cemetery, VA, as part of the Women in Military Service for America Memorial, World War II Memorial Dedication Celebration, America Celebrates the Greatest Generation. It was directed by Robert Neal Marshall. This follows on from its highly-successful US premiere production in June 2003, presented by Sandy Spring Theatre Group and Fallen Angel Productions, directed by Stan Levin. The first review available, from The Washington Post, which was outstanding, can be found on the Girlfriends page here. The excellent website devoted to Girlfriends in the USA can be found here. Girlfriends was also presented by The Portchester Players (Hampshire, UK) in July, which meant that for two overlapping nights a single one of Howard's musicals was being performed concurrently on both sides of the Atlantic!
Link to Howard's Musicals page
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On 27th June 2004 Howard's celebratory work commissioned to re-open the newly-restored organ at the Royal Albert Hall, recieved its world premiere, as part of an afternoon concert called Pipe Up!; the text of this narrative piece, Jason and the Argonauts, is written by the Irish poet Theo Dorgan. Thomas Trotter played the organ, with percussion, solo tenor (Kevin Kyle) and narrator (Samuel West). Howard introduced and conducted the work himself. It was subsequently performed by the Cambridge Organ Scholars' Forum at Caius College Chapel in March 2005.
2005 choral premieres include We are God's Labourers for the installation of the new Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, on October 4th (subsequently broadcast by BBC Radio 3's Choral Evensong) and in October 2003 O Lord God of Time and Eternity for the Choir of St Paul's Cathedral, London, performed at the Service of Commemoration for those who lost their lives in Iraq. Howard's anthem As Angels in some brighter dreams, written in memory of Brian Ashinger, received its premiere performances by the Shrewsbury Chorale of New Jersey in June 2004, at The First Presbyterian Church at Red Bank, NJ. Shrewsbury Chorale's website can be found here, as can Howard's prose explanation of the piece's provenance.
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Howard co-wrote the theme with Ed Shearmur for the Rowan Atkinson spoof 007 comedy adventure movie Johnny English.