Christopher Gray

Director

Christopher Gray has been Director of Music at St John’s College, Cambridge, since April 2023. With responsibilities focusing on the College’s celebrated choir and organ, he works with the Choristers, Choral Scholars and Organ Scholars to provide music that enhances the liturgy of the beautiful Gilbert Scott chapel, upholding a tradition that dates from the 1670s.

 Christopher received his early education at Bangor Grammar School, becoming Assistant Organist at St George’s Parish Church, Belfast, while in the sixth form. At the age of 18 he moved to England to take up the organ scholarship at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he read music. A Fellow of the Royal College of Organists, Christopher studied the organ with David Sanger and Nicolas Kynaston at Cambridge. He was subsequently taught by Margaret Phillips at the Royal College of Music, where he was a post-graduate student and a prize-winner. During this time, he also held the organ scholarship at Guildford Cathedral.

 In 2000 Christopher was appointed Assistant Director of Music at Truro Cathedral, working closely with Andrew Nethsingha and then Robert Sharpe. In 2008 he became Director of Music, taking on responsibility for the cathedral choir and its seven sung services each week, as well as the Father Willis organ. As Musical Director of Three Spires Singers and Orchestra he conducted most of the large-scale choral repertoire.

During his time at St John’s, Christopher has led collaborations with the Academy of Ancient Music and The Gesualdo Six. His first tour with the choir was to Luxembourg and the Netherlands, and included a concert at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw that was broadcast live in thirteen countries. Other highlights have included directing the famous Advent Carol Service broadcast and premiering three new works composed for the choir by Joanna Marsh. In the coming months he will release his first recordings with the choir, as well as directing them in two BBC broadcasts, and in tours to the USA, Hungary and Germany.