Popular music In the late 1970s, Goodall was a member of the band
Half Brother with his friend Jonathan Kermode. They produced an eponymous LP album,
Half Brother, in 1978.
Musical theatre Goodall's 1984 musical
The Hired Man, an adaptation of the novel by
Melvyn Bragg, won an
Ivor Novello award (1985) and
TMA Award (2006) award for Best Musical. Professional revivals of
The Hired Man in recent years include a UK tour by the New Perspectives Theatre Company in 2008 and a production directed by David Thacker and Elizabeth Newman at the Octagon Theatre, Bolton in June 2010. ''A Winter's Tale
now known as A Summer's Tale'', commissioned for the opening of the
Sage Gateshead in December 2005 was presented during 2009/10 by
Youth Music Theatre UK. In 2011 its London professional premiere at the Landor Theatre won the Off west end award for Best New Musical.
Love Story, based on the
novella by Erich Segal, premiered in 2010 at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester.
Bend It Like Beckham: The Musical, written with
Gurinder Chadha,
Paul Mayeda Berges and
Charles Hart began previewing at the
Phoenix Theatre, London, in May 2015. Other musicals include
Girlfriends (1986),
Days of Hope (1991),
Silas Marner (1993),
The Kissing-Dance (1998),
The Dreaming (2001) (both with
Charles Hart), ''A Winter's Tale
(2005) and Two Cities'' (2006).
Television Goodall has composed the main themes and incidental music for UK comedy programmes including
Red Dwarf,
Blackadder,
Mr. Bean,
The Thin Blue Line,
The Vicar of Dibley,
The Catherine Tate Show,
2point4 Children,
Words and Pictures and
QI, on which he has also appeared twice as a panellist. A single "
Tongue Tied" from
Red Dwarf reached no. 17 on the UK charts. As an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford, Goodall met actor
Rowan Atkinson and writer
Richard Curtis, his collaborators on several of these projects, including his first break into TV, ''
Not the Nine O'Clock News''.
Choral works Goodall has a body of choral music to his name, including "In Memoriam
Anne Frank" (2001), "O Lord God of Time and Eternity" (2003) and settings of
Psalm 23 (used as the theme tune to
The Vicar of Dibley) and "Love Divine". In September 2008, his
Eternal Light: A Requiem was premiered by
Rambert Dance Company to choreography by the company's artistic director,
Mark Baldwin. The result of a commission from
London Musici to celebrate its 20th anniversary,
Eternal Light: A Requiem was commissioned as both a choral-orchestral-dance piece and a choral orchestral work. The London premiere took place on 11 November 2008 at
Sadler's Wells with Rambert Dance Company, London Musici, The Choir of
Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford,
Finchley Children's Music Group and soloists, conducted by Paul Hoskins. Also in September 2008,
EMI Classics released the premiere recording of
Eternal Light: A Requiem, with soloists
Natasha Marsh,
Alfie Boe and
Christopher Maltman joining London Musici, The Choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, and conducted by
Stephen Darlington.
Eternal Light: A Requiem has now had over 700 live performances across the world. In March 2009,
Classic FM released ''Howard Goodall's Enchanted Voices'', a modern exploration of ancient chant, scored for upper voices, cello, organ, handbells and synthesiser. The disc marks Goodall's position as Classic FM's Composer-in-Residence for 2009. A month after its UK release, it became the best-selling specialist choral CD of 2009. It subsequently earned a nomination for Classical Brit Album of the Year. ''Howard Goodall's Enchanted Voices
was followed by Howard Goodall's Enchanted Carols
(November 2009) and Pelican in the Wilderness'' (March 2010). Goodall arranged an orchestral and choir score for Psalm 122 for
Tonbridge School to commemorate their chapel which burnt down in the 1980s. Goodall was also commissioned by
Truro Cathedral to write a new work for all four of the Cathedral's choirs: Truro Cathedral Choir (boys and men), St Mary's Singers (mixed adults), Cornwall Youth Choir and Cornwall Junior Choir. The piece, entitled
A New Heart, A New Spirit, sets a text from
Wisdom and
Ezekiel in four languages (English, Latin, French and Cornish). The 45-minute oratorio,
Every Purpose Under the Heaven (The King James Bible Oratorio), was premiered in
Westminster Abbey in November 2011 (conducted by the composer). It was commissioned as a gift to the
United Church Schools Trust and
United Learning Trust from Sir Ewan and Lady Harper, to mark the 400th anniversary of the
King James Bible.
Every Purpose Under the Heaven was recorded and released on the Decca Classics/Classics fm CD Inspired in 2012. Goodall's commission
Rigaudon was part of Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Regatta and he was musically responsible for Rowan Atkinson's performance at the Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics.
I am Christmas Day premiered at Southwark Cathedral as part of the Mercy Ships Charity annual Carol Service on Wednesday 5 December 2012. Commissioned by Mercy Ships UK, the work was performed by Southwark Cathedral Girls Choir, conducted by the composer. Goodall contributed two choral items for the August 4th commemoration of the beginning of the First World War at
St Symphorien Military Cemetery near Mons, Belgium, broadcast live in BBC2. He arranged British and German soldiers' songs into a suite with band accompaniment (The Band of the Coldstream Guards) and composed an entirely new work in English and German, "Sure of the Sky, Sure of the Sun – Des Himmels sicher, der Sonne sicher", performed jointly by the
London Symphony Chorus and the
Schleswig-Holstein Festival Choir, conducted by
Simon Halsey, based on the poems "May, 1915" by
Charlotte Mew (1869–1928) and "An einen vermißten Freund!" by a German soldier killed in action on the Western Front, Goldfeld (discovered by Peter Appelbaum). Present at the event, alongside members of the UK Government, were the presidents of Germany and Ireland, the King and Queen of the Belgians, and Prince William and Catherine and Prince Harry.
Steadfast, with music and lyrics by Goodall, was released on 14 October 2014, in aid of Global's Make Some Noise, a charity that helps disadvantaged children in the UK.
Steadfast included performance contributions from
Katherine Jenkins,
Laura Wright, Milos,
Charlie Siem,
Alfie Boe,
Myleene Klass and
Alexander Armstrong.
More Tomorrows was commissioned by Classic fm for Cancer Research UK and premiered by the
Philharmonia Orchestra at the
Royal Albert Hall on 25 April 2013, conducted by the composer.
Invictus: A Passion, a 55-minute work for soloists, chorus and small orchestra, was commissioned by St Luke's United Methodist Church in
Houston, Texas, and premiered there under the composer's baton in March 2018, with the UK premiere following in May 2018, given by the Choir of
Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford and Stephen Darlington.
Unconditional Love: A Cantata of Gratitude and Remembrance was commissioned by St Luke's United Methodist Church, Houston as a piece to reflect the world we were living in through the Covid-19 pandemic (premiered in Houston in 2021). St Luke's also commissioned
Christmas Cantata which premiered again in Houston (Dec 2019) and both pieces are now having national premieres worldwide. ==Presenting==