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Published: Friday, 28 June 2024 at 15:52 PM


Here’s a moment from last year’s début Classical Pride festival that perfectly crystallises the event’s colourful, adventurous and all-welcoming feel.

The pianists – partners both on and off stage – pirouetted through Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos, the instruments nestled together among the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Pavel Kolesnikov’s off-beat staccato phrases melded with Samson Tsoy’s ascending motif; acerbic interjections shifted into poignant lyricism.

It followed on from the catchy overture to Leonard Bernstein’s Candide, which featured alongside the premiere of Julian Anderson’s Echoes, with bass-baritone Davóne Tines as the soloist. ‘It was a classic Barbican concert in many ways,’ recalls conductor Oliver Zeffman of last year’s performance.

Samson Tsoy and Pavel Kolesnikov at 2023 Classical Pride. Pic: Matthew Johnson – Matthew Johnson

What is Classical Pride?

Indeed it was – except there were rainbow-coloured drapes behind the ensemble, the stage lights winked a bright shade of pink, and there was a greater proliferation of glitter. This was Classical Pride, the first event of its kind in the UK – and, remarkably, Europe.  

Given the popularity of Pride – now an annual summer celebration of LGBTQ+ culture, having developed from the first rally held in London in 1972 – it came as a surprise to learn that, prior to Classical Pride 2023, there had been no obvious classical music representation. Even Sainsbury’s and Marmite have rainbow-coloured logos.

Zeffman seized the opportunity, curating a concert and recording a new version of Caroline Shaw’s Is a Rose – the three-piece song cycle, originally composed for mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter is reimagined on the recording for baritone, soprano and tenor, sung by Tines, Ella Taylor and Nicky Spence

‘Zeffman has achieved the unachievable’

‘I wanted the different voice types to represent the diversity of Pride,’ says Zeffman. There’ll be an even broader range of styles on display this year: the first Classical Pride was so successful that it is now expanding to five shows held across five days (3-7 July). At a time where arts funding is more challenging than ever, Zeffman has achieved the unachievable: sponsors have quadrupled their commitment to the project. 

Who is performing at Classical Pride 2024?

Zeffman is keen to continue his series of firsts. The festival opens with Classical Drag, an event that combines drag queens and opera. ‘A lot of the drag queens have backgrounds in classical music,’ says Zeffman, referring to saxophone-playing Snow White Trash, self-styled as ‘the UK’s saxiest drag queen’ and Thorgy Thor, ‘Queen of Classical Music’ on reality TV show RuPaul’s Drag Race.

Saxophone player and drag queen Snow White Trash
Snow White Trash, ‘the UK’s saxiest drag queen’. Pic: Simon Pepper – Simon Pepper

‘There’s a huge amount of shared DNA between drag and opera’

From the opera side, lyric soprano Pumeza Matshikiza and Is a Rose soloist Spence will be making special appearances, and the lip-sync showdown – where drag queens mime to recordings – will be operatically themed. ‘There’s a huge amount of shared DNA between drag and opera,’ says Zeffman.

Travesti roles, such as Cherubino in Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro and Octavian in Richard Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier have long seen women dressed as men, and castrati or countertenor roles are often gender fluid. Historically, part of the thrill of a ‘trouser role’ was the forbidden love between same-sex couples, expressed in powerful music such as the love scenes between Octavian and Marschallin (and Sophie) in Der Rosenkavalier

Is music becoming more inclusive?

Voice types are no longer inextricably linked with gender. ‘Mixed voice’ choirs rather than SATB (soprano / alto / tenor / bass) are encouraged in schools, as it’s more inclusive for boys whose voices are changing, people who may not identify with the sex they were assigned at birth, and those who don’t have an ‘appropriate’ voice for their appearance.

It’s a frontier being explored on stage by transgender singers like baritone Lucia Lucas, who recently sung the lead in Tom W Green’s 2017 The World’s Wife based on Carol Ann Duffy’s collection of poems under the same title (1999). The theme is also covered by Laura Kaminsky in her opera As One, which splits voices as ‘Hannah Before’ (baritone) and ‘Hannah After’ (mezzo-soprano).