Organist performs concert for her 100th birthday
Luke Deal/BBCA woman has celebrated her 100th birthday by holding her own church concert where she played the organ.
Julia Josephs, from Walberswick in Suffolk, is the village's organist and choir leader at St Andrew's Church.
She learnt several instruments as a child and said the secret to her long life had been music.
The service to celebrate her centenary saw her playing the organ alongside a brass quintet, a choir and with some champagne thrown in.
Luke Deal/BBC"When people ask me what's the secret [to a long life], I'd like to say a few other things, but I have to say it is music," she said.
"My mother got me up with a cup of tea very early in the morning and I had to do half an hour's practice before I went to school from the age of four or five."
Born in 1926, Josephs was a scholar at the Royal Academy of Music and during World War Two she would commute into London so she could entertain the troops on the train with her viola practice.
She later taught herself the organ.
Cressi Sowerbutts
Cressi SowerbuttsAway from music, she was the owner and head of a girls' school in Leicestershire and she bought her cottage in Walberswick in about 1986 after developing a love for nearby Southwold during summer visits.
She has lived there ever since, but retiring and slowing down is not on her agenda.
Once a month she enjoys an evensong at the church where she plays the organ.
While her eyesight is not what it once was, she has specially printed sheet music.
"What I have to do now is have it enlarged and then memorise it," she explained.
"I try to do it last thing at night, I always think that's good for your memory, then it's sunk in."
Luke Deal/BBCAhead of her birthday, Josephs received a birthday card from King Charles III and Queen Camilla.
"I am so pleased and absolutely delighted because Charles was married roughly at the same time as I was, and our children are roughly the same age," Josephs said.
"I've always been in line with him and I was in line with the Queen [Elizabeth]."
Josephs noted that as she had aged, she noticed people getting kinder, but she was adamant for now that she would not be moved into a care home and would remain in her own home.
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