The Sydney University Musical Society (SUMS) is an undergraduate choral society at the University of Sydney. Founded in 1878, it is one of the oldest secular choirs in Australia, and the oldest Australian University Choir. SUMS has performed many great works over its lifetime, including the Australian premiere performances Bach's Mass in B minor and St Matthew Passion in 1880; premiére performances of Martin and Peter Wesley Smith’s Songs of Australia for the Australian Bicentenary in 1988, the world premiére of Nicholas Routley’s Mycenae Lookout in 1998, and world premiére of Anne Boyd’s carol, A Lullaby of the Nativity, written for SUMS in 2003. The Musical Society has performed with orchestras such as the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, the Sydney Youth Orchestra and the SBS Youth Orchestra. SUMS' conductor of 23 years, Ben Macpherson, retired from his post of musical director in mid-2006, with his final performance with the society being Mendelssohn's Elijah, performed in the Great Hall of the University of Sydney.
Recent SUMS performances include; Mozart's Great Mass in C minor and Fauré's Requiem in 2010; Duruflé's Requiem in 2011; Verdi's Requiem, with the Sydney Conservatorium of Music Symphony Orchestra, Choir and Chamber Choir in June 2012; J.S. Bach's Magnificat in D major and Vivaldi's Gloria in 2013; Vivaldi's Magnificat and Karl Jenkins' Stella Natalis in 2014; Mendelssohn's Elijah with the Sydney University Symphony Orchestra and Vaughan Williams' Mass in G minor in 2015.