Bach's Famous Choir


Book Description

In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the cantors of the St. Thomas School and Church in Leipzig could be counted among the most significant German composers of their times. But what attracted these artists - from Seth Calvisius to J.S. Bach to Johann Adam Hiller - to the music school and choir and inspired them to explore new repertoire of the highest standing? And how did the cantors influence the musical profile of the school - a profile that often became a bone of contention between school and city hall? The success of the St. Thomas School was not a foregone conclusion; its history is replete with challenges and setbacks as well as triumphs. The school was caught between the conflicting interests of enthusiastic mayors and townspeople, who wanted to showcase the city's musical culture, and opposing parties, including jealous rectors and elitist sponsors, who argued for the traditional subordination of the cantorate to the school system. Drawing on many new, recently discovered sources, Michael Maul explores the phenomenon of the St Thomas School. He shows how cantors, local luminaries and municipal politicians overcame the School's detractors to make it a remarkable success, with a world-famous choir. Illuminating the social and political history of the cantorate and the musical life of an important German city, the book will be of interest to scholars of Baroque music and J.S. Bach, cultural historians, choral directors, and musicologists and performers studying historical performance practice. MICHAEL MAUL is Senior Scholar at the Bach-Archiv Leipzig and lecturer in musicology at the universities of Leipzig/Halle. He is also the artistic director of the annual Leipzig Bach Festival.




History of Church Music


Book Description

This survey begins with the Gregorian chant and covers German, Netherland, Roman, Neapolitan, Venetian and English schools.







With a Voice of Singing


Book Description

A composer, conductor, church musician, and educator, Ronald A. Nelson, has spent the last sixty years shaping the lives of children and adults through his prolific choral and liturgical compositions and his passion for the people?s song.On the occasion of his eightieth birthday, his colleagues in the fields of choral and church music have chosen to honor him with insightful, yet practical essays about children, choirs, and music in the life of the church. These essays represent some of the many areas in which the exemplary work and ministry of Ronald A. Nelson set an example and provide inspiration for the church musicians of today and tomorrow.ContributorsAnton Armstrong - ?Rehearsal Techniques for the Church Choir?David and Susan Cherwien - ?Hymns New and Old?John Ferguson - ?Repertoire for the Church Choir?Helen Kemp - ?A Case for Children?s Choirs in Churches?Paul Westermeyer - ? The Oratorio Tradition and Worship?Martha Fisher - ?Tip and Tools for Music and Worship Education?Zepulon M. Highben - ?Musical Excellence and the Church Choir?Ralph M. Johnson - ?Teaching Global Song?Kristina Langlois- ?Biography of Ronald A. Nelson?Elizabeth Shepley - ?The Choir School: A Brief History?Mons Tieg - ? Worship in Space?Yvonne Thomas - ?Compositions by Ronald A. Nelson?Dale Warland - ?The Continuing Importance of Sacred Composition?










The English Chorister


Book Description

Boy choristers have sung the daily liturgy in English cathedrals and collegiate churches for fourteen hundred years. They are treasured as a unique part of our religious and cultural heritage, unmatched anywhere else in the world. Yet their history, in cathedrals and monasteries, in royal and collegiate chapels, from the middle ages, through the upheavals of the Reformation, in Georgian neglect and Victorian revival, to their CD-celebrated triumphs of today and the introduction of girls, has never before been told. The English Chorister, with its vivid, sometimes bizarre, sometimes hilarious detail, will interest musicologists, church historians and a wide general readership.