The “special” thing about Llangollen International Eisteddfod for one of its most respected judges is the high standard of the choirs who compete there.
What also mightily impresses Brian Hughes, Chorus Manchester at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester for 25 years, has been a regular adjudicator at the festival for the past decade or more and is a composer of renown in his own right, is its strong international flavour.
All this brings him to admit that he’s very much looking forward to giving his valued opinions on the 2025 competitions which are now playing out in earnest in and around the world-famous Pavilion between now and Sunday July 13.
Brian is considered to be one of the most important choral composers living in Wales today.
The highly charged rhythmic energy of his music coupled with his knowledge of vocal technique produces a fresh, contemporary style that is both readily singable and stimulating for both audiences and performers alike.
His works are regularly performed by both amateur choral groups and professional singers throughout the world. A recognition of his choral expertise is the fact that the Llangollen International Eisteddfod commissioned him to write a test piece for the 2007 Male Voice Choir competition. This was a setting of William Blake’s ‘Tyger! Tyger! Burning Bright’.
Brian, who comes from Ponciau near Wrexham just up the road from Llangollen, says he was a regular at the Eisteddfod years before he became an adjudicator there, going along to sing with his own local choir.
“I remember coming here to compete with them and that was many years ago. But even before that I learned a lot by listening to the adjudicators and applied what I’d learned from them to my own choir,” he said.
Brian’s has written extensively for choir and orchestra.
“With the choral work my main interest is in the voice. The first thing I want to hear from choirs is a healthy resonant sound. I find that some choirs don’t work enough on tone – the actual quality of the voice doesn’t come through. The choirs who concentrate on the sound are best ones.”
The two things that impress him most about the Eisteddfod from his unique musical standpoint are the standard of the choirs and the festival international character.
He explains: “The standard of choirs at Llangollen is world class in some cases, and the international flavour is amazing. The ones from America, particularly the universities like Yale and Michigan, is very high. They are a huge force to be reckoned with. Their standard is very high, almost professional.
“The best of the Philippines choirs are of immense quality. In the past we had choirs competing from Bulgaria and they were also very fine.”
Brian will be adjudicating throughout Eisteddfod week and he says the one he is particularly looking forward to is the Solo Under 17 competition.
“That’s always a very interesting one as it is packed with enthusiastic parents and supporters of the Eisteddfod.”