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All Music Guide:
Hailing from King's College in Cambridge, England, the King's College Choir is one of the world's most respected choirs, originally founded in the 1440s by King Henry VI. The choir is best known for their annual broadcast of the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, which is heard over the radio all around the world. The choir has issued numerous recordings over the years on such major labels as EMI and Decca in England, and Capitol and Polygram in the United States; toured all over the globe; and has worked with many acclaimed soloists and orchestras: the Philharmonia, the English Chamber Orchestra, and the Academy of Ancient Music, among others. In the late-20th century, the choir welcomed contemporary music into their repertoire, having commissioned works by Jonathan Dove, Thomas Adès, Richard Rodney Bennett, Judith Bingham, Diana Burrell, John Casken, Peter Maxwell Davies, Stephen Dodgson, Alexander Goehr, Jonathan Harvey, James MacMillan, Nicholas Maw, Arvo Pärt, Stephen Paulus, John Rutter, Peter Sculthorpe, Giles Swayne, John Tavener, and Judith Weir. Stephen Cleobury, who also serves as chief conductor of the BBC Singers and has recorded collections of Bach, Charles Ives, Richard Strauss, and Giles Swayne with the troupe, directs the King's College Choir. Some of the better-known releases over the years by the King's College Choir include 1984's Oh Come All Ye Faithful and 1998's King's Christmas Collection.
Wikipedia:
The Choir of King's College, Cambridge is one of today's most accomplished and renowned representatives of the great British choral tradition. It was created by King Henry VI, who founded King's College, Cambridge in 1441, to provide daily singing in his Chapel, which remains the main task of the choir to this day.
Today the choir is directed by Stephen Cleobury and derives much of its fame from the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, broadcast worldwide to millions on Christmas Eve every year, and the TV service Carols from King's which accompanies it.
Membership of the Choir
The statutes of the College provide for sixteen choristers. These are boys who are educated at King's College School. From the beginning of the 20th Century fourteen Undergraduates have also sung in the choir as Choral Scholars.
Former members of the Choir (including Directors of Music and Organ Scholars) are able to join the King's College Choir Association.
Directors of Music
The Choir is conducted by the Director of Music, a Fellow of the College.
1606-1619?: John Tomkins1622-1623: Matthew Barton1624-1626: Giles Tomkins1627-1670: Henry Loosemore1670-1726: Thomas Tudway1726-1742: Robert Fuller1742-1799: John Randall1799-1855: John Henry Pratt1855-1876: William Amps1876–1929: Arthur Henry Mann1929–1957: Boris Ord1940–1945: Harold Darke (Boris Ord's substitute during the war)1957–1973: Sir David Willcocks1974–1982: Sir Philip Ledger1982–present: Stephen CleoburyChoral Scholars
The fourteen Choral Scholars are male students (usually Undergraduates) at the College. Choral Scholars must succeed at both the general entry requirements of the College as well as the Choral Trials in order to join the Choir.
Two of the Choral Scholars are assigned the role of Beater, as Senior and Junior Beater (traditionally the Senior Choral Scholar and his pre-chosen successor); these two are also usually responsible for the direction of Collegium Regale. These two Choral Scholars usually 'beat' (conduct while in the stalls) the psalms, and often the introit, during the service, even when the Director of Music is present.
Very occasionally, a Lay Clerk may be appointed in place of a Choral Scholar, usually if a vacancy arises unexpectedly: for example, when a student, having gained a conditional place at the college (subject to A-level grades being achieved) fails to meet the conditions. Such Lay Clerks have, to all intents and purposes, the same status as a Choral Scholar. The few Lay Clerks that have existed (since the establishment of Choral Scholars) have often been Choral Scholars agreeing to remain for an additional year.
The Choral Scholars form collectively, in their spare time, a separate group, Collegium Regale (Latin for 'King's College'), which sings a wide range of music written for men's voices, from early music through to Barbershop arrangements (many of the latter having been written exclusively for the group by present/former Choral Scholars).
Groups spawned from the Choral Scholars
Various singing groups have been spawned from groups of Choral Scholars:
Collegium Regale, made up of the current Choral ScholarsThe King's Singers (1968–present)The Scholars (1968-2010) and The Scholars Baroque EnsemblePange Lingua, directed by Berty Rice (1990s)Polyphony (1986–present)Notable former members
Ralph Allwood - Precentor and Director of Music, Eton CollegeClive Carey - Baritone and composerMichael Chance - CountertenorSir Andrew Davis - ConductorRichard Farnes - Director of Music, Opera NorthGerald Finley - BaritoneEdward Gardner - Director of Music, English National OperaOrlando Gibbons - ComposerJames Gilchrist (tenor) - TenorDavid Goode - OrganistTimothy Gowers - MathematicianAndrew Kennedy - TenorStephen Layton - Conductor, Director of PolyphonyTim Mead - CountertenorMark Padmore - TenorSimon Preston - Organist and ConductorMark Stone - BaritoneRobert Tear - TenorThomas Trotter - OrganistStephen Varcoe - bass-baritoneSir David Willcocks - ConductorBob Chilcott - ComposerOrgan Scholars
The organ is played by two Organ Scholars, who, like the Choral Scholars, are students (typically undergraduates) at the College. An Organ Scholarship is awarded as necessary to ensure that there are always two undergraduate Organists in the College - a new Scholar is appointed to arrive when the previous one graduates.
If the Director of Music is not present for any reason, an Organ Scholar takes responsibility for conducting the Choir.
Tours
The Choir often tours externally, usually involving longer tours in the summer and at Christmas, and shorter stays throughout the year.
Previous tours have included:
1982 - Japan1983 - Australia and New Zealand1984 - Belgium, Holland, West Germany1985 - USA and Canada1986 - Finland, Germany (East & West)1987 - Japan1988 - Spain and USA1989 - Australia and New Zealand1990 - Italy, Switzerland, France1991 - USA1992 - France1993 - Holland and Australia1994 - Holland, Italy, Belgium, Spain, France1995 - Bermuda, USA, Germany, Belgium, France, Holland1996 - Denmark and South Africa1997 - Barbados, USA and CanadaSummer 1998 - Hong Kong and AustraliaJanuary 2000 - BermudaApril 2000 - France (Paris)July-August 2000 - Far East (Hong Kong, Macau, Taipei, Tokyo) and the USAJune 2001 - Netherlands (Haarlem)September 2001 - BelgiumDecember 2001 - France (Paris)April 2001 - Greece (Athens, Thessaloniki)July-August 2001 - AustraliaSummer 2002 - BelgiumSummer 2003 - GermanyDecember 2003 - NetherlandsSummer 2004 - Hong KongDecember 2004 - USAJuly 2005 - GermanySeptember 2005 - Italy (Turin) and BelgiumDecember 2005 - Switzerland, HollandJanuary 2006 - Italy (Genoa, Florence and Perugia)May 2006 - Germany (Stuttgart)September 2006 - Sweden (Gothenburg)December 2006 - Far East (Korea and Singapore)June 2007 - Turkey (Istanbul Festival)August 2007 - Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and FinlandSeptember 2007 - France (Ambronay) and Germany (Bonn)December 2007 - Brazil (São Paulo)April 2008 - USA (New York, Chicago, St Louis, Baltimore, Dallas, St. Paul/Minneapolis, Cincinnati, Westport CT, Ann Arbor MI)September 2008 - Italy (Stresa Festival) and Belgium (Gent Festival)November 2008 - Portugal (Porto)December 2008 - Italy (Rome) and Netherlands (Amsterdam and Eindhoven)July 2009 - Singapore (Singapore), China (Hong Kong) and China/Taiwan (Taipei)Recordings
Recent recordings under the EMI Classics label include:
2008 - Christmas at King's2007 - I Heard a Voice - Music of the Golden Age2006 - Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem2006 - Purcell: Music for Queen Mary2005 - On Christmas Day2005 - Gregorian Chant2005 - John Rutter: Gloria2005 - Heavenly Voices2004 - Rachmaninov: Liturgy of St John Chrysostom2002 - Vivaldi: Gloria, Magnificat, Dixit Dominus2001 - Handel: Coronation Anthems2001 - Best Loved Hymns2000 - Bach: Magnificat1999 - Rachmaninov: Vespers1998 - Rutter: Requiem





