Call me sentimental if you like, but I am moved by performing music close to the final resting place of its composer. I've done this a few times, since Cathedral musicians are often buried in their old workplace (Purcell being perhaps the most famous British example). A few years ago I sang some canticles by William Child in St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. Our conductor hadn't realised that Child spent most of his working life in Windsor and is buried in the side aisle of the chapel. The clergy there were delighted and assumed (since Child is hardly well known even in church music circles) that we'd chosen his music specially. If you believe that Henry VIII wrote _Greensleeves_, we could have done that there too (there is a carol that has appropriated the melody). Virginia Knight [log in to unmask] http://www.ilrt.bris.ac.uk/~ggvhk/virginia.html