Salisbury Cathedral's 750th musical celebrations continue next week when Sarum Orchestra performs the inspirational contemporary oratorio, Stari Most, as well as Beethoven's magnificent and passionate violin concerto, with guest soloist Ken Aiso.

Originally commissioned for the orchestra by Amery Hill School in Alton, Hampshire, and first performed in 2005, Stari Most is a large-scale choral work composed by Richard Chew with libretto by Peter Cann.

For the concert next week, the orchestra, under artistic director Howard Moody, will perform with soloists Marie Vassiliou (soprano) and Jozik Koc (baritone), Salisbury Cathedral Junior Choir as well as the Choir of Amery Hill School.

Stari Most takes its title from Bosnia's iconic Mostar Bridge (Old Bridge), built in 1566 and considered a masterpiece of Ottoman Turk architecture.

The bridge was destroyed during the Balkan conflict and subsequently rebuilt and reopened in 2004. Now it stands as a symbol of reconciliation and is a Unesco world heritage site.

Composer Richard Chew says of his work: "I have tried to capture in this music something of the experience of being in Mostar.

"It is perhaps the most beautiful place I have ever visited and the first sight of the bridge, a white crescent in the moonlight, is something I will never forget. The piece is also very much about young people so children sing the voice of the old bridge, an expression of its essence."

Chew describes his music as "lyrical and accessible, with a rhythmic drive and harmonic edge derived from Balkan folk music".

Howard Moody is delighted to be bringing this work into the cathedral as part of its 750th anniversary celebrations: "When the opportunity came for the orchestra to do a concert, the programme that came to mind was one that included another stone icon of Western civilization. That the cathedral is more than stone', to quote the libretto, will guarantee everyone present will have an unforgettable experience."

The evening will open with the Islamic call to prayer chanted by Izudin Mezit, the Muezzin from the Central Mosque of Mostar.

Bosnia was the first country that Hope and Homes for Children was involved with, and the concert gives its support to this charity.

And to add further poignancy to the evening, former international governor of Bosnia, Lord Paddy Ashdown, will introduce Stari Most.