Following the success of its inaugural year, Classical Pride has grown in size and is thrilled to announce this five-day festival of major events taking place from 3-7 July 2024.
Kicking off with a world-first, Classical Pride’s season also includes a choral concert featuring the world premiere of a new work by Isobel Waller-Bridge, a showcase of the top LGBTQ+ musicians from the London music colleges, a performance of Julian Eastman’s Gay Guerilla, and finally on Sunday 7 July the London Symphony Orchestra with Oliver Zeffman, Nick Grimshaw and a lineup of star soloists will present a diverse programme of LGBTQ+ composers at the Barbican including a world premiere of brand new work by Jake Heggie with a text by Taylor Mac.

Oliver Zeffman: Founder and Artistic Director of Classical Pride
The People Behind Classical Pride
Conductor Oliver Zeffman, Founder and Artistic Director of Classical Pride, announced that this year the programme has grown from one event to five, all showcasing the breadth, diversity and depth of talent of LGBTQ+ composers and artists, past, present and future.

Thorgy Thor: Drag Queen Performer at Classical Pride
Oliver Zeffman said: ‘At the inaugural Classical Pride concert last year, I was incredibly moved by the warm reception from the industry and audience alike. Now we‘re back with an expanded edition, celebrating the significant contribution the LGBTQ+ community makes – and has always made – to classical music.”

Beau Jangles: Drag King Performer at Classical Pride
Classical Drag at Classical Pride 2024
The 5-day festival opens with an exciting, brand new concept – Classical Drag – live in the 2,000-capacity venue at Outernet on 3 July. Together with a live orchestra of LGBTQ+ musicians and allies, conducted by Oliver Zeffman, competitors perform in drag. The event features Barbs (piano), Drag Race UK’s Vinegar Strokes (vocals), Snow White Trash (saxophone), drag king Beau Jangles and transgender opera performer extraordinaire Freddie Love. Judges and guests include soprano Pumeza Matshikiza, international drag artist Thorgy Thor, star operatic tenor Nicky Spence, London gay scene legend Jonny Woo and very special guest Monét X Change (Live Performance with Orchestra).

Jonny Woo: Drag Queen Performer at Classical Pride
Expect lip-sync battles featuring big opera numbers from operas including La bohème and Tosca, a Philip Glass tribute, as well as an exciting interval act featuring rising stars of the capital’s raucous queer performance scene. My Beloved Man (Milton Court Concert Hall, Friday 5 July), features London’s LGBTQ+ The Fourth Choir, conducted by Nicholas Chalmers in an exploration of the thirty-nine-year relationship between Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears.

Isobel Waller-Bridge (Fleabag, Emma, Munich: The Edge of War)
Classical Pride 2024 Performances
The programme includes the world premiere of a new commission by Isobel Waller-Bridge, with text to be written by a refugee relocated by one of Classical Pride’s charity partners, Rainbow Railroad. Founded in 2013, The Fourth Choir have curated the programme which also includes texts read by radio legend Petroc Trelawney, and features music by Britten’s contemporaries.
A Proud Future (St Giles, Cripplegate, Saturday 6 July) features star performers and composers from the LGBTQ+ student bodies of the Royal Academy of Music, Royal College of Music, Guildhall School of Music & Drama and Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in a series of concerts of LGBTQ+ music that has personal meaning for them. Taking place in the medieval parish church that sits at the heart of the Barbican Centre, the full programme, including some specially commissioned works, will be announced soon.

Stephen Upshaw: Violist Performing Julius Eastman’s ‘Gay Guerilla’
Gay Guerilla
Before the finale on 7 July, audiences will have the chance to enjoy Julius Eastman’s Gay Guerilla, a free performance in the Barbican’s foyer performed by the Julius Eastman Ensemble assembled by Stephen Upshaw in an arrangement by US composer Jessie Montgomery. The last in Eastman’s deliberately provocative ‘N***** Series’ of pieces from the late 1970s, Gay Guerrilla is an improvisatory, minimalist take on Martin Luther’s 16th-century hymn ‘A Mighty Fortress Is Our God’, recast as a manifesto about being a gay, black man.
As Eastman wrote, ‘What I am trying to achieve is to be what I am to the fullest–Black to the fullest, a musician to the fullest, and a homosexual to the fullest. It is important that I learn how to be, by that I mean accept everything about me.’

Jake Heggie: Composer and Pianist (Dead Man Walking, Great Scott, Moby-Dick)
The Composers Behind Classical Pride 2024
The culmination of 2024’s festival sees the London Symphony Orchestra and conductor Oliver Zeffman performing works from LGBTQ+ composers past and present. They are joined by presenter Nick Grimshaw and star soloists Pavel Kolesnikov, Pumeza Matshikiza, and Russell Thomas, alongside an LGBTQ+ Community Choir.

Pavel Kolesnikov: Soloist at Classical Pride
Brooklyn-born to Lithuanian-Jewish immigrants, composer Aaron Copland was gay and was accused of being a communist by the FBI; yet in his music he created the definitive American pastoral sound. His Fanfare for the Common Man was commissioned as a wartime gesture of patriotism but he had a more subversive aim in mind: ‘It was the common man, after all, who was doing all the dirty work in the war and the army. He deserved a fanfare.’ His work will be played at the coming classical pride event, a fanfare for success in spite of discrimination.

Pumeza Matshikiza: Soloist at Classical Pride
A new commission, Good Morning, Beauty by US composer Jake Heggie receives its world premiere featuring soprano Pumeza Matshikiza, setting new a text by Taylor Mac. Saint-Saëns’ Piano Concerto No. 2, with soloist Pavel Kolesnikov, is an audience favourite for its virtuosity and charm. Behind the apparent ease with which Saint-Saëns composed masterpiece after masterpiece, this former child prodigy hid the inner turmoil resulting from his suppressed sexuality and failed marriage.
Another LGBTQ+ composer from the nineteenth century, Tchaikovsky’s sumptuous Valse Sentimentale serves as an encore and as a foreshadowing of Cassandra Miller’s Round. Taking Tchaikovksy’s theme as a starting point, the Canadian composer creates a vortex of familiarity and confusion.

Russell Thomas: Soloist at Classical Pride
Szymanowski’s Symphony No. 3, ‘Song of the Night’, with tenor soloist Russell Thomas and LGBTQ+ Community Choir, is a mystical, shimmering mass of orchestral sonority with a text by Persian poet Rumi (1207-73) – a nocturnal vision of profound peace within the universe mingled with passion. Classical Pride is non-profit with net proceeds donated to three important LGBTQ+ charities; Rainbow Railroad, Terrence Higgins Trust & GAY TIMES’ Amplifund.
Classical Pride is promoted by Ozero Arts, an arts charity founded by British conductor Oliver Zeffman that undertakes ambitious artistic projects – conceiving, producing and raising money for bold ideas across live and recorded music.
To discover more, visit classicalpride.uk
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All imagery courtesy of Classical Pride.