Canadian Children's Opera Company

The Canadian Children's Opera Company (Previously called the Canadian Children's Opera Chorus, CCOC) was founded in 1968 by Ruby Mercer and Lloyd Bradshaw. The company consists of five divisions of approximately 240 boys and girls aged 6 to 19. The Principal Chorus has over 80 choristers, and they participate as the children's chorus in productions by the Canadian Opera Company (COC). The current artistic director/music director are Dean Burry/Teri Dunn. The CCOC performs many times in the year; in addition to COC productions, they perform with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra,[1] Soundstreams Canada, the Hannaford Street Silver Band, as well as on their own.[2]

The CCOC has toured across Europe and Canada, and continue to expand its repertoire of music in various languages including English, French, Italian, Serbian, Russian, Mandarin (Chinese), Hungarian, German, Inuit, as well as several African languages.

The company's repertoire consists of a mix of traditional music and modern classical pieces. The group also sings various genres of music including folk songs, opera, musicals and jazz. They have released five CDs.

Touring Across Europe

Every few years, the CCOC goes on a tour across Europe with choristers from the CCOC's Principal and Youth Choruses. The tour generally lasts a few weeks. Over the course of the tour the CCOC does many concerts and in 2011, had the privilege to compete in the Summa Cum Laude International Youth Music Festival in Vienna for the first time. The CCOC placed 2nd in the treble category of the competition during their tour in July, 2011.

Commissioned works

The CCOC has commissioned a number of works in the past, including the following:

Discography

Past artistic/musical directors

Awards

References

  1. 2008 press release from the TSO mentioning a performance that includes the CCOC
  2. CCOC entry at The Encyclopædia of Music in Canada, retrieved 2009-12-07
  3. Outstanding Choral Recording Award Recipients from the Association of Canadian Choral Communities, retrieved 2009-12-07
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.