Sloane Square Choral Society – Saint-Saëns & Franck – 6pm

Sloane Square Choral Society, conducted by Oliver Lallemant, is looking forward to our Spring Concert on Sunday 20 March at 6pm. With rare gems such as Camille Saint-Saëns' Requiem and César Franck's Psalm 150 – along with the perennial favourite Carnival of the Animals – it's an extravaganza not to be missed! Tickets at £16 (or £6 for students/children) will be available at the door on the night, and also in advance from Cadogan Hall: Cadogan Hall box office

20 March 2022

6.00pm

Holy Trinity Sloane Square

Book Tickets

Upcoming Events

17 February 2026

Bach and Pancakes

Enjoy Johann Sebastian Bach’s choral and organ music sung by members of Holy Trinity’s Choirs, including: Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring, Toccata and Fugue in D Minor while indulging in pancakes and more, as is tradition on Shrove Tuesday.

45 minutes of music followed by pancakes and refreshments,

Tickets £20 (£10 under 18s)

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28 February 2026

Holst Singers- Illuminations – Sacred Music of Europe – 7pm

Illuminations – Sacred Music of Europe opens our 2026 concert series with a pilgrimage of sacred choral music across northern Europe. Beginning in Finland with the stillness of Einojuhani Rautavaara, the programme visits the choral traditions of the Baltic states and Western Europe, exploring music shaped by prayer, ritual, and light.

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12 March 2026

The London Chorus – Vaughan Williams Five Tudor Portraits – 7.30pm

Join The London Chorus for a rare performance of Vaughan Williams Five Tudor Portraits, 7.30pm 12 March 2026 at Holy Trinity Church, Sloane Square.

The London Chorus presents a thrilling programme of the music of Ralph Vaughan Williams, one of the greatest of all British composers and a Chelsea resident for 24 years. His Five Tudor Portraits, masterful settings of the poems of John Skelton, priest and tutor to Henry VIII, are at times bawdy, poignant and witty, and deserve to be heard far more often.

We also hear his popular Five Mystical Songs, settings of the 17th-century poet and priest George Herbert, and his Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1, which conjures up an eloquent aural portrait of the Norfolk landscape and its people through five locally-sourced folk songs.

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