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Oratorio of Hope, presented by London Mozart Players, was the spectacular opening event for Croydon’s year as London Borough of Culture programme ‘This is Croydon’.

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I can count on one and a bit hands the large-scale projects I’ve worked on (over many years!) that have been equally as well designed, planned and delivered as this was. A truly joyful celebration.

Sarah Freestonecomposer

As part of this truly unique performance event, almost 400 local professional and amateur performers, young and old, joined London Mozart Players on stage in Fairfield Halls to present music created specially for the occasion in collaboration with local schools, communities, artists, multicultural groups
and dance companies. Motifs from the opening movement composed by Croydon-born, Grammy Award-nominated Tarik O’Regan were referenced in the seven following movements, composed by Fiona Brice, Sarah Freestone, Jeff Moore and Silvastone, which brought together dance, specially commissioned films, spoken word, choirs, visual art, Afrobeats rhythms and traditional Indian instruments in a rousing celebration of all things Croydon.

Staging, colourful lighting, smoke effects and projections all contributed to the upbeat atmosphere enjoyed by the largest audience seen at Fairfield Halls for a classical concert since it closed for refurbishment in 2016. As well as the Saturday and Sunday evening Oratorio performances in the Concert Hall, over 200 amateur Croydon performers took part in a Sunday Showcase of Croydon Talent which transformed the public open spaces of Fairfield Halls, inside and out, for one magnificent afternoon, with four stages showcasing the incredible diversity of music and dance being created across the borough.

Performers

Agudo Dance Company

Crisis Skylight Croydon Singers

Croydon Music & Arts young musicians

Croydon Voices Community Choir

Riddlesdown Collegiate

Subrang Arts

Silvastone

Young singers from Croydon primary and secondary schools

Composers

Tarik O’Regan

Fiona Brice

Sarah Freestone

Jeff Moore

Silvastone

I can count on one and a bit hands the large-scale projects I’ve worked on (over many years!) that have been equally as well designed, planned and delivered as this was. A truly joyful celebration.

Sarah Freestonecomposer

The experience was one of the biggest triumphs of my composing life.

Jeff Moorecomposer
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Working with children and young people

Over 250 students from dozens of primary and secondary schools across the borough were involved in the spectacular finale, with young players from Croydon Music & Arts ensembles playing alongside LMP while accompanied by a mass Children’s Chorus. 

It was really exciting to perform and the song that we sang was very good because it did represent what Croydon is and what it stands for.

Children’s Chorus MemberOratorio of Hope

Providing a platform for amateur performers

Over the opening weekend, LMP also held a free afternoon showcase of local Croydon talent in the public open spaces of Fairfield Halls, featuring performances from choirs, solo performers, dance groups and bands from all over the borough such as Beeja Dance, Croydon Salvation Army Band and Gospel Rising. Hundreds of people flooded in to enjoy the afternoon, with many in the audience either visiting Fairfield for the very first time, or returning for the first time since the pandemic.  

The event was fabulous and the vibe was absolutely amazing… Fairfield Halls was jam-packed with loads of people and kids having a great time… It was lovely to be part of such a historic event!

Micaela Africanaflamenco performer

Press coverage

The Oratorio of Hope gained a 4-star review from Richard Morrison in The Times, who described the event as “a buoyant and ingeniously constructed showcase,” highlighting the “joyous music,” “sheer quality of the participants,” “upbeat vibes” and “roof-raising finale”.  

In addition, the Oratorio featured on radio and TV, with features and interviews on ITV London and BBC London News, BBC Radio London and Resonance FM, and features in London and local press, including Inside Croydon. 

A buoyant and ingeniously constructed showcase. Each of its eight movements focused on a different facet of Croydon’s multicultural life, with a big accent on youth…

London Mozart Players played with admirable verve, whether merging elegantly into classical Indian modes
or, in a roof-raising finale, supporting hundreds of young instrumentalists and singers drawn from Croydon schools…

Richard MorrisonThe Times

It was amazing and the ladies were ecstatic to be given the opportunity to perform at Fairfield Halls.

Surinder SahotaDesiz in London

There was such a happy, buzzing atmosphere at the Halls… I had a really great time and it felt like the audience did too!

Theo Dusseksinger-songwriter

We’ve only ever seen things in the main hall, never anything informal in the foyer, but this is lovely: it takes a lot of pressure off the audience over sitting down and being quiet watching something. You can enjoy the music without that added pressure, especially if you’re not familiar with that kind of thing.

Audience member

That was a triumph. I cried. It was an event that represented what the world needs right now – inclusion, diversity, community and teamwork. So many performers of different ages, different cultures, different ethnicity, different faiths, different musical backgrounds – all striving for excellence together.

Ruth RogersLMP Leader

I had such a great time over the Croydon Borough of Culture opening weekend. Sunday was great fun, both as performer and audience.

Azra ZakirVolunteer and Choir on the Hill performer

I thought it was absolutely fantastic, each piece was different but really, really good, Iots of variety. I loved all the combination of different music and different styles – absolutely brilliant!

Audience member

I’ve never been before to the Fairfield Halls but will be back – there’s nothing like a live orchestra!

Audience member

It was stunning! A wonderful fusion of musical styles.

Audience member

The most artistically excellent Borough of Culture opening I have seen.

Truda SpruytDirector, Four Communications

What a great vibe, especially Sunday. It felt like all of Croydon was at the Fairfield Halls!

Denise KeaneArts Coordinator, Crisis Croydon

The Oratorio of Hope felt like an Olympic opening ceremony. You could tell that every artist involved was working with sincerity towards this project, and everything was performed with purpose. There was not a single person that I spoke to in the audience who was not thoroughly enthused, energised, and mesmerised by the performance or by the sheer positivity of the afternoon. And £5.50! £5.50! Not a better value ticket in the land.

Neil RidulfaS.I.N.G. a cappella choir

The whole performance came together beautifully, and I’m sure that all the young performers will remember this for many years with pride.

Dee ElliotCroydon Music & Arts

It was really exciting to perform and the song that we sang was very good because it did represent what Croydon is and what it stands for.

Children’s Chorus member
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