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We offer daily services and a creative programme of talks, events and concerts. We seek to be a welcoming space for people to reflect, create and debate.
We are delighted to announce that from 6 Jan until early Apr 2025, work will take place to reinstate the church’s South Door onto Jermyn Street, part of Sir Christopher Wren’s original design.
St James’s hosts inclusive services and a cultural programme. We seek to be a welcoming space for people to reflect, create and debate.
St James’s is a place to explore, reflect, pray, and support all who are in need. We are a Church of England parish in the Anglican Communion.
We host a year-round creative programme encompassing music, visual art and spoken word.
We offer hospitality to people going through homelessness and speak out on issues of injustice, especially concerning refugees, asylum, racial justice, and LGBTQ+ issues.
St James’s strives to advocate for earth justice and to develop deeper connections with nature.
We aspire to be a home where everyone can belong. We’re known locally and globally for our unique history and beauty, as well as faith in action, creativity and the arts, and a commitment to social and environmental justice.
We strive to be a Eucharist-centred, diverse and inclusive Christian community promoting life in abundance, wellbeing and dignity for all.
St James’s Piccadilly has been at the heart of its community since 1684. We invite you to play your part in securing this historic place for generations to come.
The work of St James’s, it costs us £5,000 per day to enable us to keep our doors open to all who need us.
New walkways, a restored courtyard and re-landscaped gardens will provide fully accessible, beautiful spaces for everyone to enjoy as well as improving our environmental performance.
St James's Church 197 Piccadilly London W1J 9LL
Directions on Google Maps
Friday 6 December 1.10pm
Jack Myles, Miguel Zoco Sesma and Amelia Lewis (tenor trombones), Cameron Bahmaie (bass trombone). The Funny Bones are a trombone quartet formed at the Royal Academy of Music, bonded over their mutual love of chamber music and the way it can be performed so uniquely through the trombone.
Online streaming
This concert will be streamed live on our YouTube channel at 1:10pm.
Support our Creative Programme
Whether £5 or any amount you’re able to give. Donations can be made in cash in the basket on your way out, or by tap donation at the machines at our exits. Your generosity helps support our cultural events and charitable services. Thank you.
The group of young musicians perform a wide variety of repertoire, ranging from the most traditional of music written specifically for the instrument, to arrangements of vocal or other instrumental music, amassing a wide array of styles.
The Nutcracker: P. I. Tchaikovsky (arr. Jack Myles and Cameron Bahmaie)
I. Overture
II. March
III. Dance of the Sugarplum Fairies
IV. Trepak
V. Waltz of the Flowers
Serenata: Liz Lane
Frösöblomster: Wilhelm Peterson-Berger (arr. Carl Lundgren)
II. Sommarsång
VI. Vid Frösö Kyrka
V. Gratulation
The Christmas Song: Mel Tormé (arr. Jack Myles)
Christus Factus Est: Anton Bruckner (arr. Elwood Williams)
City of Arts and Sciences: David Faleris
Presented in association with Royal Academy of Music