Coro Allegro is a classical music choral group based in Boston, Massachusetts, drawing its members from the LGBT community. It was founded in 1990.
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Coro Allegro was founded specifically to be a chorus of both gay men and lesbians, and it remains the only organization of that sort in Boston. It also tries to appeal to a wider audience than that normally devoted to classical music. In its first twenty years, its numbers grew from just twenty singers to more than sixty.[1]
The chorus regularly collaborates with other musical ensembles.[2] Among its most notable collaborations have been performances of Mendelssohn’s Elijah in 1999 with the Boston Cecilia and the Handel and Haydn Society under the direction of Christopher Hogwood;[3] of Robert Kapilow’s baseball cantata, a setting of Casey at the Bat for chorus, in 2001 with Musica Viva in collaboration choreographer Daniel Pelzig;[4] of Brahms’ German Requiem in 2003 with Boston Cecilia under the baton of Donald Teeters; and of both Poulenc's Gloria and Bernstein's Chichester Psalms in 2004 with Boston Cecilia.
Coro Allegro participates in the quadrennial GALA Choruses Festival.[5] It has also traveled to participate in the following music festivals:
Among the world premieres Coro Allegro has presented are:
The Artistic Director is David Hodgkins. That post has been held in the past by Thomas Kim and Jane Ring Frank.
Since 2008, Coro Allegro has chosen the recipient of the Pinkham Award, given annually in memory of the gay composer Daniel Pinkham. The award is granted to those who make significant contributions in both the LGBT and classical music communities. Award recipients are: