Welcome to our Festival blog

We are a small congregation commemorating the 400th anniversary of the death of the village's Elizabethan composer, William Byrd (c.1540 - 1623).

We are planning to erect a permanent memorial to Byrd to mark the quatercentenary since his death, and have begun a fundraising appeal. Our events this year have included a talk on The Life and Times of William Byrd (30 June), including book release; a Commemorative Service of BCP Evensong (2 July); and, welcomed The Stondon Singers who gave a sell-out William Byrd Anniversary Concert on the actual day (4 July). Stondon Massey has also featured on BBC Radio 3's 'Composer of the Week' programme (3-7 July).

This website contains everything you need to know about William Byrd's life and music as well as his links with Stondon Massey. /

Tuesday, 12 March 2024

Centenary of Unveiling of Tercentenary Memorial


In a new essay to commemorate William Byrd, K Dawn Grapes writes of the Tercentenary events that "The most meaningful service of the day may have taken place at Stondon Massey in Essex, where Byrd lived for some thirty years.  ... In March 1924, a tablet with Byrd's coat of arms was presented at an Evensong service."#

The following is an extract from 'The Life and Times of William Byrd: A Local History'.

The memorial, funded by a surplus from the London celebrations includes “the words, in raised lettering, “A Father of Musick”, these being taken from the Byrd entry in the ‘Cheque Book’ of the Chapel Royal”[1].

Its unveiling was marked by a Service on 12th March 1924, reported in The Times and locally in the Essex Review and the Essex County Chronicle and was attended by twenty men and boys of the Chapel Royal who sang a selection of Byrd’s work. The officiating preacher was Dr Gary Warman, the Bishop of Chelmsford, who unveiled the memorial: “Things were so arranged that the Bishop could easily manipulate the light cord from the pulpit”[2]

“Considerable local and general interest was taken in the historic event [on Wednesday] and the church was filled some time before the service started. An imposing touch of colour was provided by the long scarlet and gold-braided coats of the boy choristers, with the white laced ruffs as were used in Byrd’s time”.

“The service (which was conducted by the Rev. L. J. Percival) took the form of evensong, with sung responses by Byrd. Psalm 84, ‘O how amiable are Thy dwellings’, was chanted, and the first lesson read by Canon Reeve, was from Ecclesiastes. 44, verses 1-16. In the place of the Magnificat, Byrd’s anthem, ‘O praise the Lord, ye saints above’ was finely rendered, followed by the second lesson, read by Canon Galpin [of Faulkbourne, also president of the Essex Archaeological Society[3]], from Revelation 7, verses 9 to the end. For the Nunc Dimittus, the anthem, ‘Come to us we beseech Thee’ (Byrd), was substituted. After the third collect, ‘Justorum Animae’ (Byrd) was sung, followed at the close by the hymn ‘For all the Saints”, sung to the tune by Vaughan Williams. Practically all the singing was unaccompanied. The choir, led by Mr Stanley Roper[4], gave faultless renderings.

“The Bishop of Chelmsford, in the course of an address, said William Byrd’s gift was marked by three main features, each of interest.  He gave his best music for the rites and ceremonies of his own Church. His Church was not theirs, but they respected him. In his day, the English Liturgy was in the process of revision. Men were wanted to give musical settings for the new versions, and William Byrd gave them”[5].

“Canon Reeve [who from the outset took a keen interest in the erection of the tablet] thanked the committee for a beautiful gift in memory of the distinguished parishioner of by-gone days and said that he was honoured to accept the tablet”[6].

Reeve later wrote, “I little thought, twenty years ago, that I should have witnessed such a Service … or found Stondon so generally accepted as Byrd’s home and burial place”[7].



# The extract comes from the essay 'Reviving Byrd. The 1923 Tercentenary' contained within a new book entitled 'Byrd Studies in the twenty-first century' edited by Samantha Bassler, Katherine Butler & Katie Bank. (Clemson University Press, 2023)

[1] The Times. 17 March 1924

[2] ERO T/P 188/3 f688

[3] Canon Francis William Galpin was not only a professional colleague of Reeve but also a gifted musician and leading authority on ancient musical instruments. He wrote many articles and was co-author of ‘Church Plate in Essex’ (1926). He was a handsome man with dignified bearing, who never discarded his frockcoat and broad-brimmed hat of the Victorian age.

[4] Stanley Roper was organist and leader of the Chapel Royal choir and the director of the Elizabethan Madrigal Society. Also present was Dr. Charles Macpherson, organist of St Pauls Cathedral. The Service was conducted by the Rev. L J Percival, Preceptor of the Chapel Royal. (Source: The Times. 17 March 1924)

[5] The Times. 17 March 1924

[6] Essex Chronicle. 14 March 1924

[7] ERO T/P 188/3 f699