Prof of Composition, Ed Hughes, awarded an Arts Council England Project Grant!
Posted on behalf of: Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities
Last updated: Wednesday, 30 April 2025

Image courtesy of Paul Daniels, Adobe Stock
Arts Council England (ACE) has awarded a grant for ßÏßÏÊÓÆµ's new project, 'From Felpham to Beachy Head: a landscape and its people in poetry' through the ACE's National Lottery Project Grants scheme.
Led by Prof (Music, Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities), the Orchestra of Sound and Light is a music ensemble dedicated to the excitement of live music-making and composing through participatory projects. This new project builds on the Orchestra's previously ACE-funded , which features on the ensemble's album Distant Voices, New Worlds — the , November 2024.
'From Felpham to Beachy Head' will develop place-based, interdisciplinary creative music and song-writing methods and approaches with young people, inspired by radical early nineteenth-century poetic visions of ßÏßÏÊÓÆµ's landscape and environment. Inspired by poetry and film documenting people's experience of the South Downs over the last 200 years, the project charts a route along the course of the South Downs, from Felpham in the West to Eastbourne. The ensemble will tour this participatory, co-creating, music performance project to four schools and five venues in June and July 2025: Felpham Community College, Ifield Community College (Crawley), Varndean School (Brighton), Ratton School (Eastbourne), finishing at
This concluding event takes place on Sunday 13 July at the Towner, and will be an intimate afternoon of live ensemble music from the South Downs Songbook, and has been programmed alongside the (23 May to 28 September 2025), curated by (English).
ßÏßÏÊÓÆµ Retold, a research strand of the Centre for Life History and Life Writing, also supports the project, and are holding a day course at the Towner on Saturday 31 May, , that explores the art and literature of Beachy Head and the Seven Sisters, facilitating visual responses to Charlotte Smith’s nineteenth-century poem.