A King’s Ely flautist has secured a place at the Junior Guildhall School of Music and Drama.
Lauren Booth, who is in Year 11 at Kingโs Ely Senior and who joined Kingโs Ely Acremont Pre-Prep in Year 1, will be visiting the prestigious London music conservatoire every Saturday, starting this month, to study Flute.
Lauren has been playing the flute since taking advantage of taster sessions in Year 2 at Kingโs Ely Acremont Pre-Prep.
In July this year, she made school history when she achieved a 49/50 Distinction in her ARSM Diploma exam on the flute. This is the highest mark ever achieved by a Kingโs Ely student and according to Neil Porter-Thaw, Kingโs Elyโs Director of Music, is a mark very rarely achieved.
Lauren said: โMy flute teacher is Liz Hargest, who has been teaching me ever since Kingโs Ely Acremont Pre-Prep. I love to express myself through my flute and explore all the styles and genres that I can play. I enjoy performing as it allows me to share the music with the audience.โ
To say that Lauren is an active member of the Kingโs Ely Music Department would be a slight understatement. She said: โIโve been singing for about five years, and have just started playing the piano, as well as playing the piccolo, which is in the same family as the flute, but flute is my main instrument. Iโm also part of a few music clubs at Kingโs Ely, such as Piano Trio, Flute Choir, Chamber Choir, Chapel Choir, Nightingales, Concert Band and Orchestra.โ
Lauren is the fourth Kingโs Ely student to be celebrating conservatoire success recently. Ally Bowerman is visiting the Junior Guildhall School of Music and Drama to study Voice; Mimi Hughes is visiting the Junior Royal Academy of Music to study Voice; and Polly Casey is visiting the Junior Royal College of Music to study the Recorder and French Horn.
Kingโs Ely is renowned for its holistic approach to education, and this is reflected in the schoolโs outstanding Visual and Performing Arts provision. Music, Drama and Theatre, Fine Art, Fashion and Textiles, Photography and Dance are each embedded in the culture of Kingโs Ely, with vast opportunities for pupils of all abilities and aspirations. Music is one of the reasons Kingโs Ely came into existence back in 970 AD and today over a third of students learn a musical instrument or receive vocal tuition. From the boy and girl Choristers of Ely Cathedral Choir to jazz and rock bands, orchestras and its famous all boys a cappella group, the Kingโs Barbers, the quality, range and variety of ensembles all attest to the schoolโs musical pedigree.
Categories: King's Ely School News