King and Queen hear anniversary music at Balmoral church

PA Media King Charles and Queen Camilla pictured leaving a church. The King is wearing a kilt with a brown leather sporran, a beige tweed-style jacket, matching waistcoat, a white shirt and a brown tie with a single green and red stripe. The Queen is wearing a blue coat with a tartan collar trim and a red hat decorated with a feather.PA Media
King Charles and Queen Camilla were "beaming" after hearing the piece, according to its composer

The King and Queen have attended a church service near Balmoral where they heard a new piece of music celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary.

They waved to onlookers as they exited their car outside Crathie Kirk, which is near Balmoral, Aberdeenshire.

The King was in a kilt and tweed jacket while the Queen wore a blue coat with a tartan lapel and a red hat decorated with a feather.

Queen Elizabeth II was a regular and devout worshipper at the church.

Before entering the church the couple were given a hand-written manuscript of the new piece, The Weather of My Being, by its composer.

Prof Paul Mealor, who has created music for a number of royal events, also gave them a volume containing all the music he composed for their coronation in 2023.

PA Media A smiling man wearing a grey suit, white shirt and checked tie poses in front of a church. He has dark hair, combed in a side shed, and black rimmed glasses.PA Media
Prof Paul Mealor has created music for a number of royal events

The composer said he decided to mark King and Queen's anniversary by "set(ting) great poetry to music", which he said combined the King's love of music with the Queen's love of literature.

He added: "So I wrote it, and then sent it to them, and then they said, 'why not perform it now, just literally after the wedding anniversary?'

"So we had the premiere today at the service, which was very powerful".

The new piece was performed by St John's Festival Choir during the hour-long service.

Asked for the couple's reaction, Prof Mealor said: "They were beaming, it was very nice, and they thanked me very much at the end."

He added that they were "very touched" to have been given the manuscript of the new piece.

PA Media The Queen smiles as she gets out of a car at the church. The King, who is in the background of the image, is photographed waving to crowds who had assembled outsidePA Media
The Queen was all smiles as she arrived for the service

It is made up of three anniversary songs, with each designed to reflect a different aspect of enduring love.

The first song, to a poem by Daniel Hoffman, compares love to the seasons - ever changing and ever staying the same, while giving a nod to the King's love of nature and the environment.

The second is a setting of words from the Bible's Song of Solomon, and is about the desire for a profound and unwavering love while reflecting the couple's faith.

The third and final song is a setting of Robert Burns' famous poem A Red Red Rose, and reflects the Queen's love and support of literature and reading, as well as the couple's love of Scotland, where they celebrated their honeymoon in 2005.

The composer added: "Today is very special because this is the place where they spent their honeymoon, in Birkhall, and so it was lovely, pretty much on the time that they would have been doing that 20 years ago, that we performed this new piece.

"So for me, that was the special thing, and that each of the texts, each of the lyrics, has a real connection to Their Majesties."

Vatican Media King Charles and Queen Camilla meeting with Pope Francis. The King is wearing a black suit, white shirt and black tie. He is carrying a small red box. The Queen, who shaking the Pope's hand, is wearing a black dressVatican Media
King Charles and Queen Camilla had a private meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican on their 20th wedding anniversary.

The couple's actual anniversary on Wednesday fell during their state visit to Italy.

During their tour, they met with the convalescing Pope at the Vatican and enjoyed a state banquet in their honour.

Speaking to the British press during a school visit in the middle of the tour, which ended on Thursday, Camilla said her husband - who is receiving ongoing treatment for cancer - "loves his work" and wants to do "more and more and more" as he gets better, adding: "That's the problem."