
Letters from Paris Alexandra Whittingham
Album info
Album-Release:
2025
HRA-Release:
03.10.2025
Label: Decca Music Group Ltd.
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Instrumental
Artist: Alexandra Whittingham
Composer: Charles Aznavour (1924-2018), Frederic Chopin (1810-1849), Claude Debussy (1862-1918), Gabriel Faure (1845-1924), Reynaldo Hahn (1875-1947), Francis Kleynjans (1951), Elisabeth Lutyens (1906-1983), Marguerite Monnot (1903-1961), Ida Presti (1924-1967), Erik Satie (1866-1925), Yann Tiersen (1970)
Album including Album cover
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- Ángel Cabral (1911 - 1997):
- 1 Cabral: La foule (Arr. Dyens for Guitar) 03:23
- Louiguy (1916 - 1991), Edith Piaf (1915 - 1963):
- 2 Louiguy, Piaf: La vie en rose (Arr. Snowden for Guitar) 03:32
- Claude Debussy (1862 - 1918):
- 3 Debussy: La fille aux cheveux de lin (Arr. Bream for Guitar) 03:06
- Paul Durand (1831 - 1922):
- 4 Durand: Mademoiselle de Paris (Arr. Goss for Guitar & String Ensemble) 03:20
- Yann Tiersen (b. 1970):
- 5 Tiersen: Comptine d'un autre été, l'après-midi (Arr. Lefvert for Guitar) 02:40
- Gabriel Fauré (1845 - 1924):
- 6 Fauré: 3 Romances sans paroles, Op. 17: No. 3 in A-Flat Major. Andante moderato (Arr. Lewin for Cello & Guitar) 02:22
- Marguerite Monnot (1903 - 1961):
- 7 Monnot: Hymne à l'amour (Arr. Dyens for Guitar) 03:21
- Francis Kleynjans (b. 1951):
- 8 Kleynjans: Chanson in B Minor, Op. 71 02:28
- Reynaldo Hahn (1874 - 1947):
- 9 Hahn: Premières valses: VI. Assez vite (Arr. Goss for 2 Guitars) 02:23
- Charles Aznavour (1924 - 2018):
- 10 Aznavour: She (Arr. Goss Guitar & String Ensemble) 03:27
- Reynaldo Hahn:
- 11 Hahn: Chansons grises: No. 5, L'heure exquise (Arr. Goss for Guitar & Saxophone) 02:24
- Erik Satie (1866 - 1925):
- 12 Satie: Gnossienne No. 1 (Arr. Dyens for Guitar) 03:16
- Frédéric Chopin (1810 - 1849):
- 13 Chopin: Waltz No. 19 in A Minor, KK IVb/11 (Arr. Kupiński Guitar Duo for 2 Guitars) 02:21
- Ida Presti (1924 - 1967):
- 14 Presti: Danse rythmique 03:11
- Elisabeth Lutyens (1906 - 1983):
- 15 Lutyens: Douce souvenance (Arr. Lewin for Guitar) 01:48
- Lili Poe, Igit, Barbara Pravi (b. 1993):
- 16 Poe, Igit, Pravi: Voilà (Arr. Lewin & Balanas for Cello & Guitar) 03:25
Info for Letters from Paris
British classical guitarist Alexandra Whittingham will release her new album Letters From Paris on 3 October 2025 on Decca Classics. The album is a celebration of French music and a tribute to the country in which her performing career began.
Already one of the most-watched classical guitarists in the world, Alexandra has more than 65 million views across YouTube and social media. Her viral video revealing the classical roots of the Nokia ringtone has been viewed over 12 million times on Instagram alone. Known for her engaging online presence and expressive playing, she is fast becoming one of the most exciting young classical artists in the UK.
Last month, Alexandra made her Royal Albert Hall debut at Classic FM Live: At the Movies. Her performance of La Vie en Rose, arranged by Laura Snowden, was a standout moment of the evening and features on the new album in a special studio recording.
From Édith Piaf’s La Foule, a song about two lovers united then separated by a crowd, to Hymne à l’amour, recorded six months after the death of Piaf’s lover Marcel Cerdan, this album captures both the thrill of romance and the heartbreak of parting.
Alexandra has a strong personal connection to southwest France, where her journey as a soloist began. At 19, she gave her first professional recital at a guitar festival in the village of Puy-l’Évêque. Her parents joined her, and the trip became a special family holiday. They fell in love with the region and later bought the presbytery next to the church where she performed. Since then, Alexandra has spent a lot of time in France and built close ties with the local music community, including the guitar and cello festivals in the Lot region. She recalls: “France is where it all started for me.”
Other highlights include Roland Dyens’s arrangement of Erik Satie’s Gnossienne No. 1, a piece which feels at once ancient yet totally modern, and Julian Bream’s arrangement of Debussy’s La Fille aux Cheveux de Lin. The album also features Danse Rythmique by Ida Presti, Alexandra’s personal guitar heroine, and Chanson in B minor by Francis Kleynjans, where the guitar sings with tender simplicity.
In a newly commissioned arrangement of Reynaldo Hahn’s L’heure Exquise, Jess Gillam’s saxophone leaps to life with delicate melodies. Hahn’s waltz also appears in a duo with fellow guitarist Stephanie Jones. Elsewhere, Alexandra duets with Margarita Balanas on Fauré’s Romance sans Paroles and Barbara Pravi’s Voilà (which secured France 2nd place in the 2021 Eurovision song contest), both arranged by her former teacher Michael Lewin.
The album visits the cabarets and fêtes of French life, with Paul Durand’s Mademoiselle de Paris and Yann Tiersen’s La Valse d’Amélie from Amélie. Alexandra also includes She by Charles Aznavour, arranged by Stephen Goss, a song once championed by Piaf and a chart-topping hit in the UK.
Raised in Greater Manchester, Alexandra began playing guitar at the age of six, taught by her father. She won a scholarship to Chetham’s School of Music and the Royal Academy of Music, graduating with first-class honours and a master’s distinction. Her mix of classical training and digital creativity has helped her build a wide global audience.
Classic FM has praised her as “a young artist with huge potential to shape the classical world”, while The Guardian has described her as “a young 21st-century virtuoso”.
Speaking about the album, Alexandra said: “I’m incredibly excited to release this album. This is a project I’ve had in mind for so long, and it’s been such a lot of fun being able to realise these ideas whilst collaborating with such great friends and musicians. I’ve always loved pairing music by popular household names alongside composers that might be less well-known outside of the guitar world, and this record does exactly that.”
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Alexandra Whittingham, classical guitar
Jess Gillam, saxophone
Stephanie Jones, classical guitar
Margarita Balanas, cello
Alexandra Whittingham
After studying classical guitar, piano, jazz guitar and composition at the world-renowned Chetham's School of Music for seven years, Alexandra Whittingham gained a scholarship to study at the Royal Academy of Music in London. She recently graduated having been awarded first class honours and the Timothy Gilson Guitar Prize.
During her time at Chetham's, Alexandra had many opportunities to play with various ensembles, such as string quartets, guitar duets and jazz groups, which resulted in her becoming a member of Wigan Youth Jazz Orchestra. With the orchestra came the opportunity to tour Germany and Czech Republic, where they sold out various venues within the two countries.
In her final year at the school, she also gained her LRSM (Licentiate of the Royal Schools of Music) second diploma in guitar performance.
In the spring of 2013, Alexandra won the inaugural Edinburgh Guitar Competition. Following this, she travelled to Budapest to take part in the Carpathian International Youth Guitar Competition, where she gained second place.
In early 2015 at the Gregynog Young Musicians' Competition, Alexandra became Gregynog Young Guitarist of the year, and more recently was a finalist at the Aalborg International Guitar Competition in Denmark.
Alexandra was delighted to be invited to perform at Abbey Road Studios alongside singer-songwriter Imelda May for EMI Music and Sound Foundation. She has also enjoyed giving recitals in Europe at such places as Festival Le Temps des Guitares in South-West France, Vilnius Town Hall in Lithuania and various festivals in Italy.
Other venues in which Alexandra has played include opening the European Guitar Teachers' Association Conference at York's Queen Margaret's School, The Bridgewater Hall in Manchester, Milton Court Concert Hall in London and the British Embassy in Paris, where she performed to an invited audience of diplomats. Alexandra's concerto appearances also include performances with Gorton Philharmonic Orchestra and Dorset Chamber Orchestra.
Alexandra is delighted to be an Augustine Strings artist, using their Regal Blue range. She also plays a 2011 Christopher Dean guitar, sourced by Miles Roberts at Kent Guitar Classics.
This album contains no booklet.