Musicologist Elizabeth Forbes wrote, "Audrey Langford will no doubt go down in musical history as a superb singing teacher over a period of 50 years, but she also had two other successful careers, as a soprano who sang at Covent Garden in the late 1930s and, after the war, as a conductor, most particularly of the Bromley Philharmonic Choir and the Kentish Opera Group, both of which organizations she founded.
"[1] Born in Rochdale, Greater Manchester, Langford earned degrees in piano and voice from the Royal College of Music.
She was committed to the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden under Sir Thomas Beecham where she performed mainly in comprimario roles from 1936 through 1939.
[1] Some of the roles she performed at that opera house included Madeleine in Louise (1936)[2] a Flower Maiden in Parsifal (1936, 1937, and 1939),[3] and the Dew Fairy in Hansel and Gretel (1937).
[5] In 1974 she conducted the Bromley Philharmonic Choir and Handel Chamber Orchestra at Queen Elizabeth Hall for a recording of Jules Massenet's Marie-Magdeleine.