• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Folk Features HomepageFolk Features

Uplifting stories for Norfolk and Suffolk

  • Home
  • Events 2026
  • Columnists
  • About
  • Key Partnerships
  • Contact
Home » YOUR YEAR » Going the distance for a music project

Going the distance for a music project

November 28, 2022 Leave a Comment

Dr Ben Miller (on the left) is the Director of Music at St Mary’s Church in Attleborough. Here he explains how a three-day hymn marathon, raising more than £10,000 towards the Attleborough Music Project, turned out to be a joyous fundraising effort

A non-stop 56 hours and a total of 847 hymns later, and St Mary’s Church in Attleborough has raised £10,491 towards its Attleborough Music Project. The three-day fundraising event saw hymns sung from hymn book Ancient and Modern: Hymns and songs for refreshing worship. The book was sung from cover to cover during the event, with accompaniment on St Mary’s Church organ by 29 organists and hundreds of singers, all taking part in shifts ranging from one to six hours at a time. 

After a blessing given by the Bishop of Thetford, the organist at Norwich Cathedral, David Dunnett, began proceedings accompanied by the choir of St Mary’s and the congregation. Guest appearances were also made during the marathon by other well-known organists including Michael Nicholas, the Cathedral Organist Emeritus, and John Keys from Nottingham, who has recorded the entire hymnbook.

The congregation during the three-day Hymn Marathon with Matthew Wright, guest organist from Christchurch in Eaton (Copyright: St Mary’s Church)

Ancient and Modern: Hymns and songs for refreshing worship is partly arranged in the seasons of the church year, which saw the marathon begin with the journey from Advent through Christmas carols, followed by Lent and Easter to Pentecost. The mix saw St Mary’s singing ancient plainsong hymns and Victorian stalwarts such as ‘There is a Green Hill Far Away’, alongside wedding hymns including ‘Love Divine’ and well-known hymns such as ‘Jerusalem’. The hymns were all played on St Mary’s organ, which dates back to 1913 and was built by Norman & Beard who also built the organ in Norwich Cathedral.

The congregation during the three-day Hymn Marathon at St Mary’s Church, Attleborough (Copyright: St Mary’s Church)

The event was held to raise funds for the Attleborough Music Project, which aims to create a centre of excellence and bring more music to Attleborough and the wider community. The project includes the provision of a music outreach worker and essential repairs to the church organ, not to mention extension of St Mary’s facilities in Attleborough to create more space for community events including concerts and recitals.

Dr Ben Miller, Director of Music at St Mary’s, says: ‘The whole event was joyous, with everyone in church agreeing it was a great thing to have done. As a result, St Mary’s can now sing any hymn in the hymn book because we know them all! Many thanks to everyone who took part and provided sponsorship and support for the event, including those who organised refreshments during the day and night, and the organ tuners who spent a lot of time inside the organ the day before, paying particular attention to the blower as no-one knew the effect of continuous three-day playing on an organ blower! The funds raised will go a long way towards our goal to create a centre for excellence for music at St Mary’s that will enable us to bring music and its many benefits to the community in Attleborough and beyond.’

For more information, visit: attleboroughchurch.org.uk

Featured image (left to right): Dr Ben Miller, Director of Music at St Mary’s; Reverend Matthew Jackson and Nigel Waring, Assistant Director of Music at St Mary’s Church, celebrating the end of the marathon (Copyright: St Mary’s Church)

Filed Under: YOUR YEAR

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Support Folk Features

By subscribing to our newsletter and donating when you are able, you help ensure we can continue to bring you good news stories without the annoying ads.

Subscribe
Donate

Primary Sidebar

Join Folk like you

Get good news stories delivered to your inbox

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Help the historic gardens at Carrow House bloom! January 23, 2026
  • OUTPOST Gallery comes of age January 22, 2026
  • Helen’s milestone challenge for Marie Curie January 21, 2026
  • January plans January 20, 2026
  • East Anglian Air Ambulance crews treated 1,845 people in 2025 January 19, 2026

Archives

Support Folk Features

By subscribing to our newsletter and donating when you are able, you help ensure we can continue to bring you good news stories without the ads.

Subscribe
Donate

Footer

  • About Folk Features
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

KEY PARTNERS:

Swank Interiors

Copyright © 2026 · Folk Features · All Rights Reserved