Musici Ireland are one of many ensembles to feature in this year’s Finding a Voice festival.

Cork is finding its voice

Europe’s leading women in music festival will expand to Cork next month as it celebrates its seventh year of unforgettable music.

Taking in both International Women’s Day and Mother’s Day, Finding a Voice 2024 is a celebration of women’s creativity through the ages and around the world.

The festival runs from 7-10 March at various venues around Cork and Clonmel. Cork venues include the MTU Cork School of Music and Triskel Arts Centre.

This year’s festival will feature performances by some of Ireland’s leading ensembles and performers, including Musici Ireland, Madrigal ’75, Duo Anima, Amerghin, and violinist Patrick Rafter.

Audiences will get a unique opportunity to hear music by a host of fabulous female composers including Rebecca Clarke, Lili Boulanger, Joan Trimble, Clara Schumann, and Amy Beach.

One of the 2024 festival highlights will be the world première of Irish composer Judith Ring’s new work ‘The River Was Never Afraid’ for flute, clarinet, percussion, piano, violin, and cello. Commissioned by Finding a Voice with funding from The Arts Council, the piece was written especially for leading contemporary music ensemble Evlana, to whom it is dedicated. The work focuses on the role of the River Suir as it flows through the town of Clonmel.

Judith Ring says: “I tried to encapsulate the river’s defensive power alongside its natural beauty in this piece. We are taken on a journey through various imaginary happenings inspired by the river’s flow through time.”

The 2024 festival will also host the world premières of new works by Jane O’Leary and the winning piece in the Emerging Composer Competition, run in association with the Contemporary Music Centre.

It’s not just new music that audiences will be able to experience this year. Finding a Voice celebrates music by women composers through the ages. The voices of Madrigal ’75 under the direction of James Taylor will take listeners on a very different journey through the music of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, while ensemble Amerghin will combine music from the baroque era alongside traditional, folk, improvised, and contemporary music in their time-travelling, genre-defying concert.

Other highlights include the first visit to Ireland of celebrated North African singer/songwriter Iness Mezel and traditional percussionist Nora Abdoun who explore the power and beauty of indigenous Berber culture, as well as a special Mother’s Day celebration featuring Clonmel-born soprano Kelley Petcu.

Artistic Director Róisín Maher says: “I’m really thrilled to be celebrating seven wonderful years of Finding a Voice and continue to be proud of the fact that we’ve programmed the music of so many incredible women composers in that time. I’m especially delighted to have performances in Cork this year, which I think will bring Finding a Voice to a whole new audience.”