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Breaking: Rave reviews pour in for CEFC and Hertfordshire Chorus's epic 'The Kingdom' concert

Following last night's electrifying near-sold-out performance of Elgar's The Kingdom at the Royal Festival Hall, the Crouch End Festival Chorus - joined by Hertfordshire Chorus, acclaimed soloists Francesca Chiejina, Dame Sarah Connolly, Ben Hulett, Ashley Riches, and London Orchestra da Camera, under David Temple's baton - has unleashed a torrent of praise from critics and fans alike.

The ambitious gala concert, culmination of over a year's preparation and building on the choir's celebrated Signum Classics recording, brought Elgar's post-Gerontius oratorio to vivid life with its 230-voice choral forces filling Southbank Centre. Early reviews highlight the performance's emotional depth, technical precision, and sheer power.

Critical praise rolls in

Professional reviewers wasted no time celebrating David Temple and the choir's amazing success.

"I just want to say I have NEVER heard a chorus like you, much less in this piece The Kingdom. I particularly loved your commitment to the text about murderers. That was delivered with REAL feelings my dear altos! Sops and tenors high lying passages were beautiful and also startlingly powerful. Baritones had wonderful articulation too. A million BRAVOS 🩵🧡❤️🩷💜💚💛🧡"

Dame Sarah Connolly (Jan 29)


"The choral climaxes were truly glorious, and certainly both choirs were on fine form (this is not easy music, by any means) not only in terms of sound but in the way the singers attacked the text." ​

"David Temple's drew a fine performance from his two choirs..." ​

Planet Hugill (Jan 29)


"The first salute...must go to the combined choirs of Crouch End Festival Chorus and Hertfordshire Chorus... tightness of their ensemble work was excellent... David Temple...one could hear the benefit of his consistent and long-term approach." ​

"The choral writing in ‘Pentecost’...handled with consummate brilliance.

MusicOMH (Jan 30)


"Their power and the range quickly became apparent, first as The Disciples sang with the Holy Women So He was their Saviour, and then shortly afterwards as the choir joined the soloists in the complex and compelling interplay of Let Them Give Thanks."

"The [Mystic Chorus] gave the choir the opportunity to show off their deep understanding of Elgar’s vision for the piece."

"Temple's conducting was passionate and committed but never flamboyant."

Ham and High (Jan 30)


“There is nothing to compare with the visceral experience of hearing a massed choir – in this case the 230-strong combined forces of the Crouch End Festival Chorus and the Hertfordshire Chorus – in full-throated fortissimo.”

“The discipline and togetherness of the combined choirs was an impressive feature of the whole evening, whether in the beefy passages of the lower voices in Part 1 or the women’s voices as the Mystic Chorus of Part 3.

“Hats off to David Temple … for his advocacy of this piece, which couldn’t have been given a more sympathetic reading.”

The Arts Desk (Jan 31)


"The combined choruses [...] created a magnificent sound in ‘Seek first the Kingdom of God’. They seemed to relish the sheer beauty of Elgar’s harmonic progressions (especially at ‘Peace, peace be unto thee’), their close of Part I (‘O ye priests!’) powerful indeed; while ‘The Spirit of the Lord,’ the ‘Mystic Chorus’ of the third part was magnificently interiorised, and perfectly balanced."

"But this was definitely a case of the whole being more than the sum of its parts, and praise for that must go to David Temple and his faultless direction of the forces before him. A memorable evening, the massed choruses (Crouch End Festival Chorus and Hertfordshire Chorus) never putting a foot wrong, the soloists as ravishing as a quartet as they were individually."

Seen and Heard International (Feb 1)