Invisible Rainbows

Add to my Calendar 13-07-2026 19:00 13-07-2026 21:00 36 Invisible Rainbows Following two sold-out runs of James Joyce’s The Dead, London’s classical queer choir returns to Wilton’s to explore modern classics from the jazz and pop worlds of the ‘50s to the ‘80s. The choir is delighted that the concert will include a guest appearance by cabaret legend Barb Jungr (“one of the very best nightclub singers in the world” Time Out, New York). How did queer artists express their innermost feelings at a time when just a rumour that an artist was queer was enough to destroy their careers or even lead to a visit from the police? The hit song “Have I the Right to Hold You?” sold a million copies worldwide in 1964 but do the lyrics reveal deeper meanings when we know that the writers, Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley, were both gay men? Did Bowie really release a song as early as 1966 about a trans man joining the army? Did Rod Stewart’s song about a murdered gay friend really stay in the UK charts for ten weeks in 1976? And how did queer artists respond to the AIDS crisis? Barb and The Fourth Choir pay tribute to queer artists and their allies who found ways during deeply homophobic times for voices expressing queer emotions to emanate from the country’s radios and record-players, like invisible… life-enhancing… rainbows. "The Fourth Choir is definitely a chamber choir to add to your listening list." — Barry Creasy, Music OMH Wilton's Music Hall, London DD/MM/YYYY

Details

Wilton's Music Hall
Graces Alley
Whitechapel
London
E1 8JB
England

Tickets

Prices: £12–£29
Book Tickets

Programme

Leonard BernsteinWest Side Story: 'Somewhere' (arr. Robert Edgerton)
David BowieLife on Mars
Eden AhbezNature Boy (arr. Anders Edenroth)

Performers

Jamie Powe – Conductor
Barb Jungr – Voice

The Fourth Choir

Programme Note

Following two sold-out runs of James Joyce’s The Dead, London’s classical queer choir returns to Wilton’s to explore modern classics from the jazz and pop worlds of the ‘50s to the ‘80s. The choir is delighted that the concert will include a guest appearance by cabaret legend Barb Jungr (“one of the very best nightclub singers in the world” Time Out, New York).

How did queer artists express their innermost feelings at a time when just a rumour that an artist was queer was enough to destroy their careers or even lead to a visit from the police? The hit song “Have I the Right to Hold You?” sold a million copies worldwide in 1964 but do the lyrics reveal deeper meanings when we know that the writers, Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley, were both gay men? Did Bowie really release a song as early as 1966 about a trans man joining the army? Did Rod Stewart’s song about a murdered gay friend really stay in the UK charts for ten weeks in 1976? And how did queer artists respond to the AIDS crisis?

Barb and The Fourth Choir pay tribute to queer artists and their allies who found ways during deeply homophobic times for voices expressing queer emotions to emanate from the country’s radios and record-players, like invisible… life-enhancing… rainbows.

"The Fourth Choir is definitely a chamber choir to add to your listening list." — Barry Creasy, Music OMH

Invisible Rainbows

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