African Sanctus

African Sanctus has received close to two thousand live performances in over thirty countries across the five main continents. It has long been established in the choral repertoire. “The music is as fresh today as it was when first heard in 1972.” wrote the late Sir David Willcocks.

“In 1969, I went to Africa for the first time with the idea of writing a major work… On the hill of the citadel in Cairo, overlooking the Nile one evening, I suddenly heard in my head the unlikely combination of a western choir accompanying the Islamic Call to Prayer.” Some years later, when the score was published, “I still remember that moment, hoping that one day, it might be possible to hear my music on the concert platform, harmonised with the field recordings I was privileged to find.” David Fanshawe

David Fanshawe’s now legendary journey up the Nile (1969-73) became the framework of the composition, a symbolic cross-shaped pilgrimage. Armed with one rucksack and a stereo tape recorder, he succeeded in recording music from over fifty tribes in Egypt, Sudan, Uganda and Kenya, achieving such a close rapport with many local communities that they gave permission for their performances to be specially recorded. The African Sanctus journeys were sponsored by the Ralph Vaughan Williams Trust and later the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust.

African Sanctus is a celebratory and visionary work expressing unity between peoples, their faiths and, above all, their music. Its message is ‘One Music - One God.’ It is an unorthodox setting of the Latin Mass integrated with the composer’s recordings of authentic traditional African music. The taped music is heard in counterpoint with live chorus, soprano soloist and instrumental ensemble.  For David Fanshawe, there were no musical barriers.

The Sanctus Journey (1969-73)

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