Boys' choir
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A boys' choir is a choir whose characteristic sound is created by boys whose voices have not yet deepened through the changes associated with puberty. Members of a boys' choir are often termed "boy sopranos," although some boys typically sing in the alto range as well. Some boys' choirs are further supported by older male voices singing tenor and bass; these singers are often former choirboys.
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[edit] Middle Ages & Early Development
Boys' choirs, as a Euro-American cultural tradition, developed in the Middle Ages. Boys were then responsible for contributing a treble sound to church music, since women were typically barred from the performance of sacred music in a public (gender mixed) context. Some of the oldest existing boys' choirs - such as the Vienna Boys' Choir - trace their roots back to this time.
In 1498, more than half a millennium ago, Emperor Maximilian I moved his court and his court musicians from Innsbruck to Vienna. He gave specific instructions that there were to be six boys among his musicians. For want of a foundation charter, historians have settled on 1498 as the official foundation date of the Vienna Hofmusikkapelle and - in consequence - the Vienna Boys' Choir. Until 1918, the choir sang exclusively for the court, at mass, at private concerts and functions and on state occasions. (Vienna Boys' Choir website)
[edit] 20th Century
Today, church traditions with strong roots in the Middle Ages (in particular, Anglican, Catholic, Orthodox and Lutheran churches) continue to host many boys' choirs. The Anglican church is particularly well known for its contributions to choral works and arrangement for boys' voices. However, the general inclusion of female voices in church music since the mid-1800s has significantly reduced the importance of boys' choirs as church institutions. Many present boys' choirs were either founded or reconstituted during the first half of the 20th century as independent concert choirs. In 1917 an aritcle in the The Musical Quarterly identified - and criticized - a trend toward the foundation of many boys' choirs in the USA, which the author derided as the "boy choir fad."
[edit] Contemporary Developments
Various factors contributed to a subsequent decline of boys' choirs. A general societal tendency away from choral singing was certainly a contributing factor. More specifically, a movement towards gender inclucivism has led to certain reservations about "males only" choirs - as have disturbing revelations about sexual misconduct on the part of personnel in some boys' choirsand choir schools. Moreover, since the age of onset of puberty has sunk, boys' choirs can no longer expect to retain a majority of their singers through the age of 16 or 17 - as was the case when Bach wrote complex cantatas for the male treble. Boys' voices now break, on average, by the age of 13.5 (AAFP), leading to higher choir turnover rates and limiting the complexity of a choir's musical repertoire. This (early) loss of the singer's treble voice has proven frustrating for successful boy singers and contributes to negative perceptions of the boys' choir experience (for example as popularized by the 1960s Disney film Almost Angels).
Nonetheless, boys' choirs still offer boys and their families with an active point of entrance into music and vocal training. They can also help to foster discipline, high standards and cultural awareness, as well as providing strong peer groups oriented around children who identify themselves with a choir's cultural and ethical values (cf. The Choir Academy of Harlem). Youth workers have also pointed out the value of gender specific youth work, of which boys' choirs are an example.
Many contemporary choirs have also developed proactive strategies to safe-guard the well-being of young singers, ensuring transparent public relations and background checks, encouraging parental involvement (and oversight) and avoiding situations that could allow for abuse. Likewise, many choirs also provide choir alumni with extensive opportunities - often coupled with continued vocal coaching - to support their vocal transition to tenors and basses and to stimulate their continued artistic development.
The boy soloist website currently lists over 700 boys' choirs throughout the world.
[edit] Links & Reference Material
Boy Choirs website, hosts several articles or interest.
The Boy Choir and Soloist Directory
JSTOR article: Voice Change in Human Biological Development
JSTOR article: Recording Bach's Early Cantatas - discusses the significance of the earlier onset of puberty.
German Wikipedia Article de:Knabenchor
Spanish Wikipedia Article es:Coro de niños
French Wikipedia Article fr:Chœur d'enfants
Japanese Wikipedia Article ja:少年合唱
Finish Wikipedia Article fi:Poikakuoro