Quatuor Mosaïques II

Crichton Collegiate Church, Nr Pathhead

Sun 11 Sept 11am

Duration: 1 hr 30 mins approx

String Quartet in F major Op 77 No 2

String Quartet in A minor D804 ‘Rosamunde’


Half price concessions for students in full time education

c10-quatuor-mosaiques-credit-robin-mitchell-2019

Photo credit: Robin Mitchell

Concerts at this lovely mediaeval church, hidden in a secluded valley, are always a special experience and many will remember Quatuor Mosaïques’ thrilling performance there on their last visit. Haydn’s last completed string quartet is the perfect companion piece to Schubert’s great A minor quartet, composed in the same year as Death and the Maiden and suffused with poetic, melancholy beauty.

A breathtaking experience

Die Presse, Vienna

Seating Plan

See ticket prices for Crichton Collegiate Church below.

Crichton Collegiate Church

Around 1440, in the reign of King James II, William Crichton, then Lord Chancellor of Scotland, began this Collegiate Church of St Mary and St Kentigern, which may have been the site of an even older Christian shrine, and by 1449 his church, with his castle nearby, was complete. ‘Collegiate’ describes churches where priests and singing boys prayed daily for the souls of the great families who built and owned them. At Crichton a provost, eight prebendaries, two choir boys and a sacrist were appointed to pray for the souls of the Crichtons.

Lord Crichton led one of the three greatest Scottish families of the fifteenth century.  The Livingstones, the Douglases and the Crichtons were often at war with each other.  If the church looks like part of a fortified building, it is a reminder of dangerous days in this part of Scotland. After the Reformation, stripped back to an earth floor, with all the glass gone from the windows and most of the lovely medieval stone tracery destroyed, the church had become almost a ruin and only the great chancel roof survived. By 1569 it was being used as a parish church, and restoration work began in the 1580s. Further restoration was carried out in the 18th century and in the 1820s.

Used today for a variety of events including weddings and concerts, the building is now in the care of Crichton Collegiate Church Trust. Over the past 15 years the trust has completed two phases of restoration work, including a full restoration of the organ built by J Brook & Company of Glasgow in 1899.

Crichton Collegiate Church

Address

Crichton Collegiate Church
EH37 5XA

Getting there by bus

To Pathhead then a 2 mile walk

Getting there by train

To Gorebridge then a taxi

Getting there by car

2 miles off A68 via Pathhead or two miles off A7 via Gorebridge

Accessibility

Parking:

The church is at the end of a long rural single track country road. We would encourage you to car share if you can.

For blue badge holders we can reserve 3 spaces which you can book by emailing us at [email protected] These are subject to availability and and on a first come first served basis.

For everyone else there is a large corn field before you arrive at the church, to your left, which will be stewarded by ushers in high vis vests.

Please make time to walk to the venue.

Terrain:

Tarmac path up a slope to the church

Toilets:
1 unisex, accessible by a ramp, single width so limited wheelchair access

Wheelchair Access:

By ramp to side of church

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