A nationwide hunt is now on for the best UK classical vocal talent of 2026.
Hosted by the prestigious Northern Aldborough Festival in North Yorkshire, the annual New Voices Singing Competition returns for a fourth year.
The competition provides a springboard for emerging talent, offering paid performance opportunities for winners, as well as a £7,000 prize fund.
The New Voices Singing Competition is open to soloists, duos, and ensembles of up to eight participants with a focus on singing. Participants must be aged from 18 to 32 to enter and be UK or Irish residents or nationals. Deadline for entries is Friday 24 April, 2026.
The singing competition has built a remarkable reputation thanks to the calibre of the competition’s judging panel, featuring esteemed figures in classical music.
Past judges have included Dame Jane Glover, Sir Thomas Allen, Sir John Tomlinson CBE, and Dame Felicity Lott.
This year’s judging panel features the conductor and former musical director of Opera North Paul Daniel CBE, the acclaimed soprano Carolyn Sampson OBE, accompanist Anna Tibrook, alongside Robert Ogden, director of the Northern Aldborough Festival and CEO of Temple Music Foundation, and Sir Andrew Lawson-Tancred, chair of Northern Aldborough Festival, and the High Sherriff of North Yorkshire.
The New Voices Competition was launched in 2023 in response to the funding cuts the classical music sector faced, to provide a platform for emerging talent.
Robert Ogden, Artistic Director at the Northern Aldborough Festival, said: “We launched the competition in a landscape of funding cuts. Music continues to be under siege. It’s perhaps harder than ever for talent, particularly from under privileged backgrounds, to pursue a career in the industry. This competition is designed to support young talent and offer a level playing field. We’re proud to offer substantial cash prizes and performance opportunities, and to offer semi-finalists a subsidy to cover their travel expenses to take part.”
Winners perform at next year’s Northern Aldborough Festival alongside paid recitals, funded by the Yorkshire Music Future Fund, at two of Yorkshire’s leading festivals – Leeds Song Festival and Harrogate International Festivals.

Leeds Song Festival (formerly Leeds Lieder) has built a reputation for musical excellence with its artistic programme, and for featuring new and emerging talent alongside established artists. Harrogate International Festivals is a key cultural provider for the North. Alongside celebrating world-renowned artists, it champions up-and-coming talent across the Arts.
The inaugural winner of the New Voices Competition was the mezzo-soprano Lea Shaw, who was consequently picked as a BBC Music Magazine ‘Rising Star.’ 2024’s winner was mezzo-soprano Judith Le Breuilly, with George Ireland on piano, who, as a result, performed live on BBC Radio 3’s In Tune. 2025’s winner was the Scottish soprano Rachel Munro with pianist Jia Ning Ng.

Each June, Northern Aldborough Festival welcomes world-class acts to the beautiful North Yorkshire village.
Now in its 32nd year, 2026’s festival features clarinettist Emma Johnson, pianist Lucy Parham with the actress Joanna David performing I, Clara, and pianist Sarah Beth Briggs. It also welcomes the Orchestra of Opera North performing Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, the Wild Arts opera company with Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro, and jazz from the legendary bandleader Clark Tracey with his quartet. The festival’s guest speaker is the broadcaster and journalist, Amol Rajan.
The shortlisted singers will be invited to perform at the live semi-finals and grand final of the New Voices Singing Competition which take place during the festival (18 to 27 June). Audiences have a unique chance to witness the UK’s rising stars of the future.
Aldborough is a picturesque Roman village, just half an hour from York or Harrogate. The festival, whose patron is Dame Judi Dench, has become a leading fixture on the classical music calendar.
To find out more and to apply visit New Voices Singing Competition 2026 | The Northern Aldborough Festival
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Notes to the editor:
For further media info, contact Ann Chadwick, ann@causeuk.com M: 07534892715.
Northern Aldborough Festival
The Northern Aldborough Festival was born in 1994, centred around the picturesque village of Aldborough near York. It was described by the Times as ‘well on its way to being one of the leading fixtures on the classical music calendar.’ Its core aim is to bring exceptional music to new audiences, in intimate rural locations where it would not normally be heard. With musical talent sourced from all over the world, the festival offers audiences a consistently high standard of music. Tickets for 2026 go on sale in the spring.
For high-res images for press use, go to this dropbox.
Festival Director, Robert Ogden
Artistic Director of the festival is Robert Ogden. Until recently Robert ran his family’s flagship jewellery store in Harrogate, which James Roberts (JR) Ogden founded in 1893. Before taking on Ogden of Harrogate, Robert sang all over the world.
As a boy, he was a chorister at Westminster Cathedral, before training at King’s College, Cambridge, the Royal Northern College of Music and at the Netherlands Opera Studio. An operatic countertenor, he performed to critical acclaim in opera houses and concert halls around the world. In January 2026 he took up the role of Chief Executive of The Temple Music Foundation.