Murray Forbes Somerville, graduate of New College, Oxford, holds degrees also from Union Theological Seminary in New York and the New England Conservatory; he served for thirteen years as university organist at Harvard. Retired to South Carolina, he is currently Committee Chair for the L’Organo organ recital series, part of the Piccolo Spoleto Festival in Charleston.
To try and categorize Anna Lapwood’s career is a challenge. She is a hugely successful concert organist, performing across Europe, Africa, and the United States; she is a conductor, director of music at Pembroke College, Cambridge (appointed at the age of 21, the youngest ever in Oxbridge); she is a recording artist, arranger, singer, radio and television presenter, TikTok personality with millions of hits, and last year was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire by King Charles III, with Princess Anne making the presentation.
Her recital repertoire includes not only the standard classical organ works of Bach, Duruflé, Price, and the like, but often also her own arrangements of movie scores, a genre she has loved since childhood. Go to her YouTube channel and particularly youtube.com/watch?v=VT5B-vEPeXI for an organ concert performance like none other. Or watch her numerous posts on TikTok.
It took us nine months to find a short time in her schedule for our Zoom interview. And even though she had just finished a European concert tour, traveling back home that day, she was as full of energy as it seems she always is, and (as you would expect from an Oxford graduate) articulate and ready to answer slightly edgy questions about the choral and organ world, as well as sharing her experiences in so many different musical fields and her goals in reaching wider and wider to share her love of the instrument, her love of music, and her joy in communicating with people.
Well, hallo, Anna!
Hello! Good to see you!
Good to see you too, Anna. Thank you for taking time out of what I know is your extremely busy schedule to talk with me. By the way—when did you start in Germany this morning?
I set off at nine and got back home. . . about ten minutes ago.
Wow! Well, for the first question I have been burning to ask you for a year now: how did you manage to get 5,000 people in June 2023 to come to the Royal Albert Hall for a late-night organ concert?
I still don’t really understand what happened there. That felt like such a significant moment, as the concert was such a remarkable experience. I hadn’t expected that number of people, but they were mostly there from social media. It was this massive moment, in my mind, of realizing that what I’ve been doing on social media can translate into bums on seats at a concert hall as well. I think that’s the thing that brings me the most joy, to see people coming to their first ever organ concert. And I hope they’re coming back for more.
Yes, indeed. That leads me to what I was going to ask you about TikTok: how that works for you, how it helps, what use can be made of it? And are you worried about any government bans of TikTok?
Yes, I mean I’m obviously keeping an eye on that side of things; I think it’s slightly less of a conversation here [in the UK] than it is in the U.S. It wouldn’t be ideal, although I obviously do a lot on Facebook and Instagram as well, so there’s a mix of different platforms in there. But I think the thing that I’ve realized is wonderful about sharing on social media, with the organ specifically, is that our biggest problem as organists is that we’re hidden from the audience. If you think about the fact that with any artist on any instrument or a singer or whatever, the whole thing is trying to create a connection with the audience, right? That’s performing, and we are automatically at a disadvantage straightaway. What I think social media is amazing for, is you can bring them immediately right next to you and give them the experience of sitting on the organ bench with you whether it’s in rehearsal or in performance, which then means if they do come to a concert and they can’t see you, they have all those memories from the videos. They know what you’re thinking, they can imagine what it looks like so much more easily, and it helps break down those barriers.
Another thing that has struck me is how comfortable you are at addressing a camera, addressing people. Even when people come up to you during practice sessions you greet them warmly, whereas most of us get annoyed. Do you have any words of wisdom for your colleagues on that subject?
Well, to be fair, we all know that there are different circumstances, right? If you have twenty minutes to register, and that’s nowhere near enough time, and you’re really, really stressed, and someone comes up to you, you’re probably not going to react in quite the same way as if you’re registering for eight hours and have a bit more relaxed schedule. In that case people coming up and asking questions can be a really welcome break from the intense brain work. But the thing I just always keep in my head is that you never know what tiny interaction could sow a seed in someone’s head that makes them want to try the organ themselves, makes them want to go to an organ concert, or it just makes them think differently about the instrument or about classical music in general.
I see all of our roles as organists as evangelists for the instrument, and that spreads through every minute of every day. I love it personally. If I’m doing an overnight at the Albert Hall, it makes such a difference when someone comes up and asks me to play something. It’s like I’ve had a shot of caffeine, and I can keep going for another two hours when I might have been flagging before.
Which leads me to my next question: how did you get started on the midnight to 6:00 a.m. shift at the Albert Hall, and, for the benefit of our readers, tell us a little bit about the place and the instrument.
So, I started working at the Royal Albert Hall a couple of years ago. I had a message from the former artistic director, Lucy Noble, and she just said, “I’d love to have a chat with you about something at the Royal Albert Hall.” And I have never replied to a message faster, literally embarrassingly fast. Within a minute of it arriving, I wrote “Yes, yes,” because I have always loved that organ and I’d had the chance to play it a couple other times in the past. She asked if I would become one of their associate artists; the whole point of that role being to try and bring a different audience to various aspects of the Hall; so, there are a couple of us in different fields.
She said to me, “What would you want to do as associate artist?” And I said that I want to put the organ right at the middle of everything that the Hall’s doing, and I want it to be something that people talk about and think about including in concerts. Whether they are classical concerts or pop concerts or rock concerts, I want them to think of the organ as an amazing novelty thing, to take the concert to a new level. We all kind of looked at each other and went, “Oh, that’s fun, but it’s never going to happen.” And then it just started happening kind of naturally, because the other thing that I said would be really important is getting access to the organ.
They gave me, maybe once a month, a slot between midnight and six in the morning. And sometimes that’s registering for an upcoming concert, sometimes it’s filming videos for the Hall or for my channels. And often I’ve found now that one of those sessions can lead to a concert because people stumble across you there. If they’re in the middle of a residency, then they all want to play the organ, and that’s great. It’s happened a couple of times now, and it’s completely changed my life. It’s an incredible organ, such a rich organ, I mean the orchestral color, the bass drum, the bells—it’s so much fun to play. But I think almost more than that, it is so perfect for that space, it brings together so many different events, not just different genres—they have tennis matches and boxing matches in there. That organ can hold the room, whatever the event is; it can compete with a massively amplified rock band, and it feels like sitting at the helm of a ship.
How would you compare that to some of your experiences in the United States? What are some of your favorite instruments in the States?
You have so many great instruments in the U.S. I know that we have amazing ones here as well, but I do think that organs in the U.S. seem to have more gizmos and fun kinds of bells and whistles, right? And also, things that make our life a little bit easier as organists. They have very logical setting systems and things. I think my favorites from the most recent tour were definitely Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, which was just this massive bucket-list moment. Although next time I go I really want to have more time, because I landed and then I had fourteen hours in one day to register, and then the next day was the concert day and dealing with flight hours. I was so tired and so overwhelmed, and I feel like I sort of scratched the surface of what that organ can do, but I would love just to be there for a week and get to know it properly and spend more time with the amazing people there as well. So that’s one of them. And the other one, possibly my favorite other than the Albert Hall, is Disney Hall in Los Angeles. Oh, such an incredible instrument, and the hall has such a lively acoustic. It’s so warm and so clear. And again, the team there are just such wonderful people, and they care about opening up the instrument to as many people as possible.
Going off on a completely different tangent—having myself lived in Zimbabwe as a teenager (or Rhodesia as it then was)—are you still doing your visits to Zambia?
I am. I’m actually about to take the Choir there. We’re off next week.
Oh, wonderful; congratulations! Tell us more about that.
I started going out there when I was a university student, and there was a charity called the Muse Trust, which started taking these trips where they would take two Oxford students and two Cambridge students who would go to help teach music in Zambia for a month. I went out on this first trip and absolutely fell in love with everything about the place. And the music—there was so much music everywhere, just everywhere you turned, people were singing, people were dancing. And I just thought this is a pretty wonderful thing.
And then when I started working at Pembroke [College, Cambridge] nine years ago, in my first year I got chatting with our dean, who is also our chaplain. He’d spent some time in Zambia and Zimbabwe, and we soon decided to run a choir tour there with them. That kickstarted things again, and I’ve been going back every year since, trying to go for three weeks or a month and doing a whole range of things: teaching music and working with some incredible musicians there.
I basically go and I say, how can I help? What can I do? What would be most useful. And what I find, so much of it is literally can we just sit and make music together, which is the most incredible feeling, right? We all know what it’s like to just spontaneously sit down and be like, let’s just play, let’s just mess around and see what happens. What I try to do, at the request of the musicians that I work with there, is share those videos so that people can see that there is this incredible talent everywhere. And I’m trying to help nurture careers when I can. For example, one of the Zambian singers is now in the UK, and I’m trying to help him as much as I can. One of the other things that I do is talk to them about how you market yourself as a musician, how you use social media to create an income stream from music, because at the moment being a musician in Zambia isn’t really a possibility as a career path.
It’s an incredible thing. I feel so lucky to work there. It’s like this reset every year, which also just reminds me not to take this for granted at all because there are so many musicians there who would desperately love to do what I do for a living and who just can’t because they were born in a different place.
Well, give Victoria Falls my love, please, when you go there again. So let’s talk about Pembroke and what you’re doing there. Before you went there, to be honest it wasn’t always thought of as a musical powerhouse, but you’ve changed that in no uncertain terms.
Yes, it’s been a bit of a rollercoaster.
And you started a girls’ choir; tell us about that.
When I first came up, there was a chapel choir, and I started working there when I was twenty-one, very much learning on the job. I wasn’t quite sure what I was doing or what I wanted to do. I just knew I wanted to make music and loved making music. And it was amazing how they actually let me learn on the job; they took a massive risk appointing someone so young and so inexperienced. I think they saw that I wanted to grow the music department into something that the college could be really proud of and something they were known for. It was toward the end of my first year, I remember the daughter of one of my colleagues coming into my office one day and saying, “I think you need to set up another girls’ choir, because there aren’t enough girls’ choirs in Cambridge. There’s not enough opportunities for girls to sing.” And her dad said, “I promise I didn’t ask her to say that.” But it lit the spark in my brain. It was like, well, that sounds like a fun idea. And because I was twenty-one and because I was so full of energy and was just throwing absolutely everything I had at this job, I thought, “I’ll start up a girls’ choir.” I think there’s something liberating about being early on in a job when you don’t see red tape, you just see opportunities. And so now I think I would have probably done the setting up process slightly more carefully and cautiously; but the college was incredible at helping me turn everything around pretty swiftly. We had a girls’ choir the next year, and now they are like
my children.
Honestly, when I perform on the organ I have their names written throughout my scores based on what character I’m trying to conjure up in my playing. During the Duruflé [Prelude and Fugue on the Name of Alain] I have names of the girl choristers all the way through. I think it’s just one of the greatest privileges to help shape people’s early musical lives and hopefully give them confidence and make them realize that they’re capable of so much.
I do remember that right before the 100th anniversary of the Nine Lessons and Carols Service, in 2018, when British opera star Leslie Garrett made a statement that there should be girls in King’s College Choir, you wrote at that time that this made you angry. Do you still feel that way?
It’s a really interesting question. I think my thoughts have changed a bit; I think what I would defend is the importance of gendered spaces. So, in the same way that I think having a girls’ choir is such an amazing thing—and I love them so much, and there is something so unique about it being a group of girls—I think having boys’ choirs can be a really positive thing, in exactly the same way. I think the suggestion that we can just solve all problems by mixing everything—I don’t think that’s necessarily right.
I would say when people complain about the idea of introducing girls into something like King’s, I think one of the things they often say is, “Oh, the sound is different.” And I’m like, come on, so often in those early experiments you’re comparing boy choristers who had sung every day and been trained every day with untrained girls. Of course, the sound is different, but actually so many people can’t tell the difference when it’s two well-trained different sex choristers.
I’ve always felt that it’s much more about developmental issues and social cohesion and all that sort of stuff.
Yes. What I would say is that I think gendered spaces are super important for those who want it. I think mixed spaces are also really important for those who want it, but I think what we do need to make sure is that there is parity of opportunity. And by that I mean there is the opportunity for girls to sing to that standard and with that level of publicity, so that it’s not just boys who sing for the really high profile services. That is really important because we all say you can’t be what you can’t see, right? Increasingly you sort of think, why is that and how can we make a difference there?
Of course, the U.S. has a slightly different problem, in that actually it’s often very hard to persuade boys to sing.
Well, this is the other side of it, and it’s one of the reasons I remember finding it frustrating those years ago, having worked with boy choristers in various different places and seeing what a great thing it is for them to be choristers, looking at how if you’d move away from the chorister roles to more general singing, the number of boys versus girls singing in any normal school choir is so skewed the other way. You’re going to have maybe thirty girls and then two boys, so we need to make sure we’re still encouraging boys to sing and finding ways to encourage them. Making sure that the opportunities are there for them as well is essential. But I think it’s about finding the right ways to do that that allows parity of opportunity.
This leads me actually to my next question: how did you feel when you were the first woman organ scholar in 500 years working with the all-male choir at Magdalen College, Oxford? You’ve said you had a stiff learning curve; tell us a little bit more about that.
You stole the words right out of my mouth! Yes, it was a very steep learning curve. When I started as organ scholar I had never accompanied a choir on the organ. And then I was doing it. I had accompanied choirs all the time on piano, but not on the organ. I didn’t know any of the standard choral repertoire because I hadn’t been brought up in that world. I knew orchestral repertoire extremely well because I had spent years as an orchestral harpist, but I didn’t know all the kind of normal choral repertoire you might expect someone to know. I had also been at an all-girls school for my entire school life. So, to say it was a culture shock doesn’t even scratch the surface. It was like suddenly being thrown into a country where you don’t speak the language. I remember vividly being asked to go and get the Psalters from the Song School and having no idea what a Psalter was but being too embarrassed to ask. I was standing there in the Song School looking around, going, “What am I looking for?” because nothing said Psalter, but I was spelling it without the “P”—so this is what I mean by I really didn’t know what I was doing. But in a way I’m so grateful for my time there because I learned so much, so fast, because if I didn’t I wouldn’t have survived.
It was very much like I remember thinking, “I can’t do this, I can’t do this!” Then sitting myself down and being like, “You’ve got to make the most of this opportunity, so you’re going to work as hard as you can to try and catch up on all the stuff you’ve missed.” I practiced the organ for eight hours a day, and once I’d done that for a term and had sort of learned the standard repertoire and started to get a bit more comfortable with things and immersed myself in that world, I loved it.
One of your first media successes that I saw was that amusing video you did back in 2016 about May Morning1 and behind the scenes, waking up the choral scholars, warming up the choristers, and all of that. I was just wondering whether you think that the rather media-savvy tradition of your college—thinking about Oscar Wilde, Dudley Moore, people like that—was that an influence on you?
I just think I wanted to share a little bit of the craziness that goes on behind the scenes. I mean, it’s a bizarre thing, right? This choir gets up at whatever time it is in the morning, goes and rehearses, climbs the tower, sings to however many thousands of people, then goes and eats breakfast, and then does another service. It’s so crazy. I just thought—actually people might find this interesting. I guess that’s exactly the same ethos I’ve applied ever since. I just think there are so many bits of being a musician generally that are so weird and so crazy, and people find it interesting. Seeing kind of under the hood as it were.
It’s still up there on YouTube, I just checked on it the other day. Now let’s move into one or two quick things. What does it mean to be a member of the Order of the British Empire. Can you tell us about the ceremony and all of that?
I can’t remember when I got the letter now. I was doing carol services, so it was around the end of November when it is Cambridge Christmas. I got this letter, which said on the front, “On His Majesty’s Service,” and I remember I was at Pembroke. I kind of looked at this thing and ran back to my office and ripped it open. It said, “You’ve been made a member of the Order of the British Empire,” and I kind of jumped up and down and screamed quite a lot. It’s a huge honor, and actually the best thing about that day was that my parents happened to be there that evening. They turned up for the service, I grabbed them, I had like two minutes I think before the service, grabbed them, ran to my office and said, “Sit down, you’ve got to hear this!” They have sacrificed so much, and they’ve worked so hard to enable me to do what I do.
And you just happened to have your phone going?
Oh, no, that was very much intentional. I said, “I’m filming you, by the way.” I don’t know what they thought I was going to tell them, but they were very, “What is going on?” But I wanted to capture the moment because I know how much that meant to them. That level of recognition I think was a huge moment for them, almost even more than it was for me. It was a massive moment for me. I cried so much when I read the letter.
And then you told Princess Anne that she should take up the organ?
Yes. I was not very cool at the presentation ceremony, I have to say. They give you all these instructions, and they are very, very kind about it, and you think I’ll be fine and then. . . . Well, I certainly found the moment I stood there I just didn’t know what to say. I freaked out. I sort of whispered at her (because they were playing really quiet music, and I didn’t want to interrupt the music). She said, “You can speak louder than that.” And then she started asking about the fact that there aren’t many female organists. And I said, “Well maybe you should have a go, maybe you should try the organ here,” because we were at Windsor Castle. And she said, “Oh, I don’t know about that.” I was quite persistent in encouraging her to play.
I think perhaps you’re known for that.
And you’re supposed to sort of reverse away. I think I messed that up entirely and nearly fell over. And she laughed out loud. So, all in all it wasn’t my smoothest moment.
You’ve invented a hashtag—#playlikeagirl—how’s that going?
Well, you know what, that was never started as kind of, “Oh, I want to invent a hashtag,” it was just like a response to lived experiences I guess. It came about, as I’m guessing you know, there was this competition where my feedback was “you need to play more like a man.” And that was equated to, I needed more power and authority, which as a nineteen-year-old I remember thinking, “I’m not sure that’s the right way to phrase that.” I had no problem being told to play with power and authority, but I do have a problem with that being equated with only being masculine; and I also had a problem that there was an assumption that the male playing was better. There were other comments from the same person to other people, other female conductors, that were along the same line.
I remember sort of stewing with it for a while, and then maybe about a year later Marin Alsop spoke out about how if she does a certain gesture, it’s seen as “girly,” and if a man does it it’s “sensitive.” Just looking at the discrepancies, I shared this experience and put the hashtag, “Play Like a Girl,” and then it’s sort of just gently grown from there. For me it’s about just saying to people, “You should be happy to play as yourself,” because I think the most important thing in music is that you’re sharing something of yourself through music. My experience is that since I started trying to be myself as a performer instead of being who people want me to be, it’s been a totally different experience. Performing is something that I love, though I used to hate it. I think it’s just saying to people, you can be yourself when you play and own that.
Terrific. I have one other thing. I was just wondering if you’d like to offer any reflections on being an Oxford-trained musician working in a Cambridge College (when it does usually tend to be the other way round).
Well, Oxford–Cambridge, everyone makes a big thing about this, but I don’t really believe that it exists. Ultimately, I think we’re all really trying to do the same thing in very similar places. I mean, I grew up in Oxford so there’s a certain loyalty there, but I have now spent more time in Cambridge than I did in secondary education, which is terrifying, and I love Cambridge with my whole heart. I guess I don’t tend to think about that too much.
Congratulations once again on all you’re doing; you make us all proud. We can’t wait to see what you come up with next. I do know that one of the things that’s next for you is matrimony; we’re thrilled for you and wish you both all the very best.
Thank you so much. No idea when we’ll find time for that, but we’ll find
a way.
Note
1. Every year, on the morning of May 1, at 6:00 a.m. (weather permitting, the moment when the rising sun first strikes the spires of the great Bell Tower at Magdalen College, Oxford), the College Chapel Choir sings from the top of the tower the “Hymnus Eucharisticus” written for the occasion in the seventeenth century by its then director Benjamin Rogers, followed by madrigals. This becomes the cue for the thousands gathered on the streets below to break out the champagne, start Morris dancing, and generally indulge in all the other traditional rituals associated with the arrival of spring.
Thanks to Meg Davies, associate manager, musicprods.co.uk; the Reverend Amanda Robertson, technical assistance; and Barbara Wilson, transcriber.