Wishing Tree released

We’re pleased to share that our eleventh album, Wishing Tree (2026), is now available.

When we first stepped outside the stone walls of the Cambridge chapels where we had spent our first year performing together, we embarked on a tour that contained what might well be described as a smorgasbord of music. The first half alone ran to over an hour! We like to think our programming has grown a little more disciplined since then, but the green shoots of this collection, now called Wishing Tree, first appeared during that summer tour of 2015, when we gave ten concerts over nine days, bundled into a seven-seater with our suitcases.

Wishing Tree takes the listener on a choral journey through time, poetry, and song, rooted in tradition yet alive with contemporary expression. This programme explores a more secular repertoire than our previous albums, moving from Renaissance works that celebrate nature and love to contemporary settings, in which composers breathe fresh life into the verses of Christina Rossetti and Kathleen Jamie. A number of pieces cast light on childhood, conjuring moments of innocence which are lost and then found. Interwoven throughout are re-imaginings of traditional British folk songs, arranged by musicians continuing a longstanding tradition of developing and reshaping existing material—a tradition championed by Ralph Vaughan Williams and Lucy Broadwood in the late nineteenth century.

We wanted this collection to sit comfortably alongside our other recordings, both in spirit and in sound. To that end, we returned to the Church of All Hallows in Gospel Oak, a space whose acoustic allows the voices to bloom with clarity, capturing the colour and detail that this repertoire demands. Wishing Tree is the culmination of these threads: a journey through time, poetry, and song, rooted in tradition yet alive with contemporary expression.

The CD is available to order now via our website – we hope you enjoy listening as much as we enjoyed creating the disc!

Wishing Tree

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