Members of the choir. (From left to right: Nick McNeill, Johnny Harman, Gavin Hawkins, Adam Donnelly, Nigel Lewis, Ciro Miranda, Johnny Evans, Lawrence Fletcher, Mark Achurch and John Beauchamp. Credit: The Cardiffian.

‘I’ve really found my place, this is where I belong’: On the road with the South Wales Gay Men’s Chorus

The cross-generational choir singing their way through the Christmas season

IF you are travelling up the A48 on a chilly winter morning, the last thing you might expect is to be serenaded by the warming tones of a Christmas carol while driving.

But packed into a coach on the way to Llanelli, the South Wales Gay Men’s Chorus (SWGMC) is practising for the festive period.


Nigel Lewis, 66, is the oldest member of the SWGMC. Credit: The Cardiffian

At 66, the retiree doesn’t often go out on the gay scene. “If I go on the scene,” he says, “I go with the choir, so this is my social life.”

He remembers his mother asking him to join: “She said ‘you’ll make lots of friends’ and she said ‘you’ll really enjoy it’… and that was her dying wish actually.”

What started with just a handful of gay men in 2008, has evolved into a fully-inclusive choir, open to all sexualities, genders and backgrounds.

During his time with the choir, Nigel says he has become “the joker in the pack”, dressing up in any costume laid out for him. “They’ve made me a witch, I’ve been a bride twice, I’ve been a Christmas cracker.”

Despite his experience, he still gets nervous before performing and is known to take a swig of his ‘special squash’. “Just to get me going,” he says.

It’s the choir that puts his nerves at ease: “Being around the guys, it makes you feel more relaxed”.

The SWGMC have performed at the Hackney Empire, Cadogan Hall and the National Theatre, travelled to Munich and Bologna to compete internationally, and are winners of the Cornwall International Male Choral Festival.

Despite reaching beyond South Wales, the group still focuses on spreading joy throughout the region, a mission at the forefront of their 2024 Christmas calendar, which begins with a performance at Llanelli Queer Collective’s first festive Fayre.



As Nick McNeill, a longstanding member of the choir explains, “someone who’s probably struggling a little bit with their sexuality, they might see us at a Pride or at an event and think ‘Oh, there’s an opportunity for me to step up and become my true self by being part of this community’”.

Walking to the pub after the performance, some of the choir have a slur shouted at them from people in a passing car.

Whilst this is a rarity for the choir to experience, it shows why their meer presence, showing queerness in a positive light, is still important in 2024.

Jayden, one of the group’s newest members, says: “If everything was perfect there wouldn’t be the need for a choir.”

Nick McNeill has been performing with the SWGMC for 16 years. Credit: The Cardiffian
Members of the SWGMC at Pride. Credit: South Wales Gay Men’s Chorus

Choir members perform at Cardiff’s World AIDS Day event. Credit: The Cardiffian



Mark Achurch has been a ‘real-turner upper’ at rehearsals for the past 12 years. “I joined for the singing really rather than the social but found both and met a family,” the 61-year-old says.

Lawrence says that a fixed point of contact is important for the choir: “That regular week on week on week no matter what is really helpful for some people…that sense of ‘I know I’m gonna walk into a room full of people that actually care whether I’m dead or alive’…there’s certain people who need that.”

This sense of care also extends beyond the rehearsal room.

Part of Lawrence’s role as the SWGMC’s Accessibility & Inclusion Officer involves establishing a support network for members who might be struggling. The choir also regularly holds social events, from meeting in local bars to hosting cabaret nights. This summer proved particularly memorable, when a walk up Pen Y Fan ended with the choir in a sing-along in a pub, with a group of ladies and their terrified husbands.

Lawrence Fletcher, 32, and Mark Achurch, 61, enjoy the cross-generational friendships that the choir can bring. Credit: The Cardiffian.

‘I’ve really found my place. This is where I belong’


Adam Donelly has enjoyed getting to know everyone in the choir. Credit: The Cardiffian

For Adam Donelly, the concert marks his first official performance with the group since joining in August.

The 25-year-old says he found it “quite daunting at first”, but being part of the group has increased his confidence. When he sings with the choir he knows he isn’t on his own.

“I’ve really found my place,” he says. “This is where I belong”.

Over the concert’s two-hour run-time a festive feast is served, with the audience listening to dreamy acappella performances of Christmas classics, from Nos Galan to Fairytale of New York. In breaks between songs, the choir members top-up drinks, restock plates of food and chat to friends and family.

Despite the wonderful music, it is these moments of human interaction that evoke the true spirit of Christmas. The smiles, hugs and laughter show the deep bonds of friendship and community the choir have created not just between themselves, but across Wales.

Nick describes it best: “We’re just a choir that happens to be gay”.


  • The South Wales Gay Men’s Chorus regularly posts updates about upcoming performances, events and socials on its website, Instagram and Facebook.