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Opinion

Why Bangor Cathedral Choir must be saved

By Mark Mansfield
Members of the choir at Bangor Cathedral. Photo via YouTube

An anonymous worshipper at Bangor Cathedral

There has been a choir at Bangor Cathedral for hundreds of years. In the last four years under the direction of Joe Cooper, the standard of its singing has been particularly high, as those who have heard it perform at services and at concerts would agree.

It sings seven regular services every week, in Welsh and English, as well as additional services at festivals such as Christmas and Easter. But while it would be easy just to look at the work that the choir does by leading the worship, that would be to overlook the role that it takes on behalf of the cathedral in ministry to its members and others.

The choir contains singers from about the ages of 7 to 70. Children learn and develop musical skills, as well as standards of teamwork and professionalism. They have to learn music in many different styles and for many different occasions.

This is a fantastic opportunity that can give them life-long skills and memories. In order to carry out their role, in music, members of the choir have to work together, and this means that people from very different backgrounds, of all different ages, at different life-stages, all cooperate in a professional manner towards the same goal. Inevitably, this means that there is a sense of closeness and inclusivity.

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Students

Choir members include students gaining their independence for the first time; children transitioning from primary school to secondary school, and also going through the major steps – GCSE, A Levels – in their school journeys. The choir is a support for people, whatever they may be going through. It is a friendship group, and non-judgmental. Over the past four years members of the choir have blossomed, and gained in confidence. Since Joe started in Bangor, many children and young adults from the choir have been baptised and confirmed as they discover more about faith through their singing. Families of choir members are also drawn into the cathedral. At a time when the Church as a whole is struggling to get its message across to young people, the choir is already demonstrating what can be done.

Unfortunately, the cathedral as a whole, and the choir in particular, have in recent months been on the wrong end of negative headlines. The real problem is that the Chapter (the cathedral’s governing body) has not been running the cathedral properly. Money was spent without proper accountability or decision-making processes.

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Vulnerable

Important policies and procedures were never put in place, leaving visitors and members of the congregation vulnerable. However, members of the choir and parents / guardians of choristers are fully supportive of Joe Cooper, his talent, his vision and his dedication. None of us feel that the choir is an unsafe place, but we do feel that the choir has been left to take the blame for a situation not of its making.

One of the major issues is the lack of communication from the Chapter, and this is something which is felt by the members of the choir, parents of children in the choir, and the congregation as a whole. The policy of silence and not commenting no longer works, and has given rise to suspicion and ill-feeling. To launch redundancy consultations lasting two weeks, as the Chapter has done, is grossly unfair.

There was no prior warning to the congregation of financial difficulties - which were not caused by the choir, of course. Redundancies should never be the first resort and the Chapter has turned down offers to help with fundraising if the redundancy consultations are paused. Sacking low-paid employees from the choir and elsewhere in the cathedral before all other options are exhausted is precisely the sort of behaviour that priests and bishops would condemn if a supermarket or a factory were to propose it. The Church in Wales should be better than this.

Redundancy

This is why the choir walked out during the last hymn on Sunday 31st August. In what several supportive members of the congregation have described as a “dignified” protest, the choir demonstrated its support for colleagues threatened with redundancy in a way that drew attention to the situation without disrupting worship. The choir’s punishment for standing up to the Chapter is that it has been suspended for a month. In other words, for refusing to lead the congregation in one hymn, it has been banned from leading the congregation in any hymns at all!

The redundancy proposals, which include sacking two out of the three singers paid to be there for every service of the year (excepting a few holidays) and slashing Joe’s hours, mean that the choir will not be able to survive in anything like its current form. It will not be able to sing as often, even if people are still willing to sing for a Chapter that does not value music, which will lead to a decline in standards, making the choir less attractive to join, and so the decline spirals.

Losing the choir would be an immense blow to the musical community at Bangor and the wider area, and would be a huge loss to the Cathedral itself and its congregation. That is why we have signed the petition set up in support of the Bangor Cathedral choir, and why we urge people to do the same.

The petition can be signed here.

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6 comments

Evan Aled Bayton

Bangor Cathedral has imploded. There are the hallmarks of corruption or bad management or both. It seems to me that an in depth audit of the cathedrals finances is needed. Sacking the choir is a typically British sideshow trick to cover up bigger issues.

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John Nicholson

If only we still had a choice of family worship as at St Mary's church and St David's church, both now closed. There is an urgent need for a thorough independent investigation into the management of the church in Wales. I have already raised many issues with the Charity Comission, and would like to meet and discuss with any others who share concerns. John Nicholson [email protected]

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John Ellis

'There is an urgent need for a thorough independent investigation into the management of the church in Wales.' While I accept that clearly the entire Welsh Anglican province is hardly in a sound state overall, in fairness the issues highlighted here are surely specific to the Bangor diocese and particularly to its cathedral.

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another Anon Worshipper

Dear Anonymous Worshipper, Thank you for your detailed letter championing the Bangor Cathedral Choir and voicing concerns about the Chapter's recent decisions. As a fellow worshipper who has cherished the cathedral's services , I too value the choir's exceptional standards under Joe Cooper, its role in developing life-long skills among members aged 7 to 70, and how it fosters inclusivity, teamwork, and faith exploration— even drawing families closer to the Church. That being said, I feel compelled to offer a stronger defense of the Chapter's perspective, especially given the misconceptions circulating. The recent overhaul in Chapter membership represents a crucial turning point, enabling decisive action on problems that have festered for far too long under previous governance. This isn't about targeting the choir but about instilling proper accountability and decision-making processes that were sorely lacking, ensuring the cathedral operates with transparency and fiscal responsibility—core values the Church in Wales upholds. Consider the boiler failure last year: it not only affected operations and services for weeks during a critical period but also revealed deeper infrastructure vulnerabilities, likely necessitating a complete and expensive replacement. The Chapter's swift response to "put the brakes on" spending is a prudent defense against insolvency, preventing a crisis that could shutter the entire cathedral. Far from being unfair, the two-week redundancy consultations are a structured, legal process designed to minimize disruption while exploring all viable alternatives, including cost-saving measures elsewhere. Redundancies are indeed a last resort, but dismissing them outright ignores the reality that unchecked deficits have already strained low-paid staff across the board—not just in the choir. On the matter of communication, the Chapter's cautious approach has been to avoid premature alarm or speculation that could erode congregation trust further. Silence isn't evasion; it's a strategic pause to gather facts and formulate sustainable plans, countering the suspicion you mentioned by prioritizing actions over reactive statements. Moreover, they've actively addressed the vulnerabilities you raised—implementing overdue policies and procedures to safeguard visitors, choristers, and the community, which previous leadership neglected. This proactive stance demonstrates their commitment to safety and ethical management, not blame-shifting. The choir's protest on August 31st was higly disrespectable to the clergy and the laity present at the english language communion service and questionable the example set to young members of the Choirbut the one-month suspension serves as a fair measure to reinforce the sanctity of worship and prevent precedents that could lead to broader disruptions. From my viewpoint this upholds order without diminishing the choir's overall contributions. Importantly, they've not rejected fundraising offers; instead, they're integrating them into a broader strategy, having paused consultations where possible to collaborate with supporters—showing openness to community input once immediate stability is achieved. In essence in so much as Choral music is important to the Cathedral do not lose sight that Cathedral is a place of Worship first and foremost not a factory floor replicating the 1970s industrial disruptions.

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Scarlet Cassock

Could you please explain what you mean by "the recent overhaul in Chapter membership"? All I can think of is when two long-standing members of diocesan clergy were added to further tip the balance away from people actually involved with the cathedral, but none of the trustees who have been in post since before 2021 (apart from the obvious) stepped down... Not much of an overhaul if you ask me! Also, you speak of the Chapter's swift action to "put on the brakes" in June 2025, apparently in response to the boiler failure in November 2024 - even supertankers respond quicker than that! Or have I misunderstood? Also I know from speaking to senior clergy at the time that the chapter were quoted £2,500 for a replacement boiler (hardly a huge sum) and while I am not surprised that further works were identified, surely doing this at the time would have been entirely financially manageable and prudent? Finally, perhaps the protest on 31st August was disrespectful, but for me it seems a whole lot less disrespectful than the way the chapter has treated the choir and particularly the Director of Music over the past 18 months.

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Sara Elin Roberts

I am a member of the choir and the parent of two children who sing in the choir. While I applaud you for defending the Chapter's perspective, I wonder why Chapter is not defending themselves? Unfortunately, as an adult who has a job and earns money, I am unable to have your blind faith in Chapter's decisions. I find the suggestion that Chapter are defending the congregations to be incredibly patronising. People giving their money (I was doing that until recently) because they mustn't worry their pretty little heads, and trust that Chapter are using their money carefully? Um - let's have some statements, some numbers. Perhaps the congregation isn't clever enough to deal with very difficult things like accounts. You mention the boiler. It is still not fixed. Why has there been no appeal to fix the boiler? I know boilers are very expensive but we're supposed to trust that Chapter will get it fixed and keep up with our direct debits? Why not talk to people? Now, I have two children in the choir and I am incredibly insulted at your anonymous criticism of my parenting. The lack of care shown to the children in the choir and the lack of respect to the parents seems far more insulting that the choir quietly walking out without disturbance. Who are you to tell me that the example set to my children is questionable? Chapter isn't actually setting any example to the children, as they have never communicated with them in any way whatsoever. Of course, the choir is being punished now, children and all, and the example that the Chapter is setting is that this is a church that punishes. Perhaps forgiveness is for small things, and leaving a service quietly and without fuss or disturbance is too much for forgiveness - it has to be punished, revenge must be taken for this immense act which caused so much horror. Don't speak, don't explain, don't support, punish, punish, punish - but everybody, trust in Chapter and don't worry, don't question!

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If only we still had a choice of family worship as at St Mary's church and St David's church, both now closed. There is an urgent need for a thorough independent investigation into the management of the church in Wales. I have already raise...

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