Dictionary Definition
choral adj : related to or written for or
performed by a chorus or choir; "choral composition"; "choral
ensemble" n : a stately Protestant (especially Lutheran) hymn tune
[syn: chorale]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Choral
English
Adjective
choralTranslations
- Italian: corale
Noun
- a chorale
Translations
- German: Choral,
Extensive Definition
A choir, chorale, or chorus is a musical
ensemble of singers.
Choral Music, in turn, is the music written specifically for a
choir to perform.
A body of singers who perform together is called
a choir or chorus. The former term is very often applied to groups
affiliated with a church (whether or not they actually occupy the
choir)
and the second to groups that perform in theatres or concert halls,
but this distinction is far from rigid. "Choir" has the secondary
definition of a subset of an ensemble; thus one speaks of the
"woodwind choir" of an orchestra, or different "choirs" of voices
and/or instruments in a polychoral
composition. In typical 18th to 20th century oratorios and masses, chorus or choir is usually
understood to imply more than one singer per part, in contrast to
the quartet of soloists also featured in these works.
Structure of choirs
Choirs are often led by a conductor or choirmaster. Most often choirs consist of four sections intended to sing in four part harmony, but there is no limit to the number of possible parts as long as there is a singer available to sing the part: Thomas Tallis wrote a 40-part motet entitled Spem in alium, for eight choirs of five parts each; Krzysztof Penderecki's Stabat Mater is for three choirs of 16 voices each, a total of 48 parts. Other than four, the most common number of parts are three, five, six and eight.Choirs can sing with or without instrumental
accompaniment. Singing without accompaniment is called a cappella
singing (although the
American Choral Directors Associationhttp://acdaonline.org/cj/stylebook.shtml
discourages this usage in favor of "unaccompanied," since "a
cappella" denotes singing "as in the chapel" and much unaccompanied
music today is secular). Accompanying instruments can consist of
practically any instruments, from one to a full orchestra; for rehearsals a
piano or organ
accompaniment is often used even if a different instrumentation is
planned for performance, or for rehearsing a cappella music. While
Eastern
Orthodox churches and some synagogues ban the use of
instruments, in churches of the Western Rite
the accompanying instrument is almost always an organ, although in
colonial
America, the Moravian
Church used a string quartet. Many churches which use a
contemporary worship format will have a band in the sanctuary to
accompany the singing.
Beside the leading of singing in which the
congregation
participates such as hymns
and service music, choirs still sing the full propers
(introit, gradual, communion antiphons appropriate for the
different times of the liturgical
year) at a few churches, chiefly those of the Anglican
or Roman
Catholic churches; far more common however is the performance
of an anthem at the
offertory. Roman
Catholic Churches use, at their discretion, additional orchestral
accompaniment. The most noted Roman
Catholic Church in the world to use an orchestral accompaniment
is
Saint Patrick's Cathedral in New York
City.
Choirs can be categorized by the voices they
include:
- Mixed choirs (i.e., with male and female voices). This is perhaps the most common type, usually consisting of soprano, alto, tenor and bass voices, often abbreviated as SATB. Often one or more voices is divided into two, e.g., SSAATTBB, where each voice is divided into two parts, and SATBSATB, where the choir is divided into two semi-independent four-part choirs. Occasionally baritone voice is also used (e.g., SATBarB), often sung by the higher basses. In smaller choirs with fewer men, SAB, or Soprano, Alto, and Baritone arrangements allow the few men to share the role of both the tenor and bass in a single part.
- Male choirs, with the same SATB voicing as mixed choirs, but with boys singing the upper part (often called treble or boy soprano) and men singing alto (in falsetto), also known as countertenor. This format is typical of the British cathedral choir.
- Female choirs, usually consisting of soprano and alto voices, two parts in each, often abbreviated as SSAA, or as soprano, soprano II, and alto, abbreviated SSA
- Men's choirs, usually consisting of two tenors, baritone, and bass, often abbreviated as TTBB (or ATBB if the upper part sings falsetto in alto range like barbershop music, even though this notation is not normally used in barbershop music). Occasionally, a men's choir will have Basso Profondo, the lowest of all male vocal ranges.
- Children's choirs, often two-part SA or three-part SSA, sometimes more voices. This includes boys' choirs.
Choirs are also categorized by the institutions
in which they operate:
- Church choirs
- College choirs
- School choirs
- Community choirs (of children or adults)
- Professional choirs, either independent (e.g., Chanticleer) or state-supported (e.g., National Chamber Choir of Ireland, Canadian Chamber Choir, Swedish Radio Choir etc.)
Finally, some choirs are categorized by the type
of music they perform, such as
- Symphonic choirs
- Vocal jazz choirs
- Show choirs, in which the members sing and dance, often in performances somewhat like musicals
Layout on stage
There are various schools of thought regarding how the various sections should be arranged on stage. In symphonic choirs it is common (though by no means universal) to order the choir behind the orchestra from highest to lowest voices from left to right, corresponding to the typical string layout. In Germany the conductor Helmut Kickton introduced 2000 the historic layout of the 17th –19th century with the choir in front of the orchestra. In a cappella or piano-accompanied situations it is not unusual for the men to be in the back and the women in front; some conductors prefer to place the basses behind the sopranos, arguing that the outer voices need to tune to each other.More experienced choirs often sing with the
voices all mixed together. Proponents of this method argue that it
makes it easier for each individual singer to hear and tune to the
other parts, but it requires more independence from each singer.
Opponents argue that this method loses the spatial separation of
individual voice lines, an otherwise valuable feature for the
audience, and that it eliminates sectional resonance, which lessens
the effective volume of the chorus.
For music with double (or multiple) choirs,
usually the members of each choir are together, sometimes
significantly separated, especially in performances of 16th-century
music. Some composers actually specify that choirs should be
separated, such as in Benjamin
Britten's War
Requiem.
Consideration is also given to the spacing of the
singers. Studies have found that not only the actual formation, but
the amount of space (both laterally and circumambiently) affect the
perception of sound by choristers and auditors.
Skills involved in choral singing
Choral singers vary greatly in their ability and performance. The best choral singers possess (among others) the following abilities:- to sing precisely in tune and with a vocal timbre which complements the other singers;
- to sing at precisely controlled levels of volume, matching the dynamics and expression marked in the score or prescribed by the conductor, and not sing so loudly as to be markedly detectable as an individual voice within the section;
- to sight-read music fluently;
- to read and pronounce the lyrics accurately and in the pronunciation style specified by the leader, whatever the language may be;
- to remain completely alert for long periods, monitoring closely what is going on in a rehearsal or performance;
- to monitor one's own singing and detect errors.
- to accept direction from others for the good of the group as a whole, even when the singer disagrees esthetically with the instructions;
- to produce a healthy and pleasing tone through the use proper vocal technique.
- to sing using pure vowels
- to sing music in keys other than that in which it is written, since choirs often sing music in transposed form.
- to stay in tune with the ensemble, even in the event the ensemble modulates slightly away from "perfect" pitch
Historical overview of choral music
Medieval music
The earliest notated music of western Europe is
Gregorian
Chant, along with a few other types of chant which were later
subsumed (or sometimes suppressed) by the Catholic Church. This
tradition of unison choir singing lasted from sometime between the
times of St. Ambrose
(4th century) and Gregory
the Great (6th century) up to the present. During the later
Middle Ages, a new type of singing involving multiple melodic
parts, called organum,
became predominant for certain functions, but initially this
polyphony was only
sung by soloists. Further developments of this technique included
clausulae, conductus and the motet (most notably the isorhythmic motet), which,
unlike the Renaissance
motet, describes a composition with different texts sung
simultaneously in different voices. The first evidence of polyphony
with more than one singer per part comes in the Old
Hall Manuscript (1420, though containing music from the late
1300s), in which there is occasional divisi (where one part divides
into two different notes, something a solo singer obviously
couldn't handle).
Renaissance music
During the Renaissance,
sacred choral music was the principal type of (formal or 'serious')
music in Western Europe. Throughout the era, hundreds of masses and
motets (as well as various
other forms) were composed for a cappella
choir, though there is some dispute over the role of instruments
during certain periods and in certain areas. Some of the
better-known composers of this time include Dufay,
Josquin
des Prez,
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, and William
Byrd; the glories of Renaissance polyphony were choral, sung by
choirs of great skill and distinction all over Europe. Choral music
from this period continues to be popular with many choirs
throughout the world today.
Madrigals
are another particularly popular form dating from this period.
Although madrigals were initially dramatic settings of
unrequited-love poetry or mythological stories in Italy, they were
imported into England and merged with the more upbeat balletto, celebrating often
silly songs of spring, or eating and drinking. To most English
speakers, the word madrigal now refers to the latter, rather than
to madrigals proper, which refers to a poetic form of lines
consisting of seven and eleven syllables each.
The interaction of sung voices in Renaissance
polyphony influenced Western music for centuries. Composers are
routinely trained in the "Palestrina style" to this day, especially
as codified by the 18c music theorist Johann
Joseph Fux. Composers of the early twentieth century also
endeavored to extend and develop the Renaissance styles. Herbert
Howells wrote a Mass in the Dorian mode entirely in strict
Renaissance style, and Ralph
Vaughan Williams's Mass in G minor is an extension of this
style. Anton von
Webern wrote his dissertation on the Choralis
Constantinus of Heinrich
Isaac and the contrapuntal techniques of his serial music
seems informed by this study.
Baroque music
The Baroque period in music is associated with the development around 1600 of the figured bass, with dramatic implications in the realm of solo vocal music such as the monodies of the Florentine Camerata and opera. This innovation was in fact an extension of established practice of acompanying choral music at the organ, either from a skeletal reduced score (from which otherwise lost pieces can sometimes be reconstructed) or from a basso seguente, a part on a single staff containing the lowest sounding part.A new choral style was the vocal concertato, combining voices
and instruments; its origins may be sought in the polychoral
music of the Venetian
school. Claudio
Monteverdi (1567-1643) brought it to perfection with his
Vespers and
his Eighth Book of Madrigals, which call for great virtuosity on
the part of singers and instruments alike. His pupil Heinrich
Schütz (1585-1672) (who had earlier studied with Giovanni
Gabrieli) introduced the new style to Germany. Alongside the
new music of the secunda
prattica, contrapuntal motets in the stilo antico
or old style continued to be written well into the 19th
century.
It should be remembered that choirs at this time
were usually quite small and that singers could be classified
as suited to church or to chamber singing. Monteverdi, himself a
singer, is documented as taking part in performances of his
Magnificat with one voice per part.
Independent instrumental accompaniment opened up
new possibilities for choral music. Verse anthems
alternated accompanied solos with choral sections; the best-known
composers of this genre were Orlando
Gibbons and Henry
Purcell. Grand motets
(such as those of Lully and Delalande)
separated these sections into separate movements. Oratorio,
pioneered by Giacomo
Carissimi, extended this concept into concert-length works,
usually loosely based on Biblical stories.
The pinacle of the oratorio is found in George
Frideric Handel's works, notably Messiah
and
Israel in Egypt. While the modern chorus of hundreds had to
await the growth of Choral
societies and his centennial commemoration concert, we find
Handel already using a variety of performing forces, from the
soloists of the Chandos
Anthems to larger groups (whose proportions are still quite
different from modern orchestra choruses):
Yesterday [ie Oct. 6] there
was a Rehearsal of the
Coronation Anthem">Coronation AnthemsCoronation Anthem in Wesminster-Abby,
set to musick by the famous Mr Hendall: there being 40 voices, and
about 160 violins,
Trumpets,
Hautboys, Kettle-Drums and Bass'
proportionable...!|Norwich Gazette, October 14,
1727
Lutheran composers wrote
instrumentally-accompanied cantatas, often based on
chorales (hymns). While Dieterich
Buxtehude was a significant composer of such works, it was
largely up to the next generation to undertake cantata cycles on
texts for the entire church year.
Telemann
wrote choral cantatas for Frankfurt (later published in solo
versions as the Harmonische Gottesdienst), but Johann
Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) made a truly monumental
contribution: his obituary mentions five complete cycles, of which
three comprising some 200 works are known today, in addition to
motets, (Bach himself did
not use the term "cantata", motet here refers to his "church music"
without orchestra) passions,
masses and the Magnificat.
A point of hot controversy today is the so-called
"Rifkin hypothesis", which re-examens the famous "Entwurff", Bach's
1730 memo to the Leipzig City
Council (A Short but Most Necessary Draft for a Well Appointed
Church Music) calling for at least 12 singers. In light of Bach's
responsibility to provide music to four churches and be able to
perform double choir compositions with a substitute for each voice,
Joshua
Rifkin concludes that Bach's music was written with one voice
per part in mind.
Classical and Romantic music
Composers of the late 18th century became fascinated with the new possibilities of the symphony and other instrumental music, and generally neglected choral music. Mozart's choral music generally does not represent his best work, with a few exceptions (such as the "Great" Mass in C minor and Requiem in D minor). Haydn became more interested in choral music near the end of his life following his visits to England in the 1790s, when he heard various Handel oratorios performed by large forces; he wrote a series of masses beginning in 1797 and his two great oratorios The Creation and The Seasons. Beethoven wrote only two masses, both intended for liturgical use, although his Missa solemnis is suitable only for the grandest ceremonies. He also pioneered the use of chorus as part of symphonic texture with his Ninth Symphony.In the 19th century, sacred music escaped from
the church and leaped onto the concert stage, with large sacred
works unsuitable for church use, such as Berlioz's
Te Deum and Requiem,
and Brahms's
Ein
deutsches Requiem. Rossini's
Stabat mater, Schubert's
masses, and Verdi's
Requiem
also exploited the grandeur offered by instrumental
accompaniment.
Oratorios also continued to be written, clearly
influenced by Handel's models. Berlioz's L'Enfance du Christ and
Mendelssohn's
Elijah
and St
Paul are in the category. Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Brahms
also wrote secular cantatas, the best known of which are Brahms's
Schicksalslied
and Nänie.
A few composers developed a cappella music,
especially Bruckner,
whose masses and motets startlingly juxtapose Renaissance
counterpoint with chromatic harmony. Mendelssohn and Brahms also
wrote significant a cappella motets.
The amateur chorus (beginning chiefly as a social
outlet) began to receive serious consideration as a compositional
venue for the part-songs of Schubert, Schumann,
Mendelssohn, Brahms, and others. These 'singing clubs' were often
for women or men separately, and the music was typically in
four-part (hence the name "part-song") and either a cappella or
with simple instrumentation. At the same time, the Cecilian
movement attempted a restoration of the pure Renaissance style
in Catholic churches.
20th and 21st centuries
As in other genres of music, choral music underwent a period of experimentation and development during the 20th century. While few well-known composers focused primarily on choral music, most significant composers of the early century produced some fine examples that have entered the repertoire.The late-Romantic composers, such as Richard
Strauss and Sergei
Rachmaninoff, contributed to the genre. Ralph
Vaughan Williams's
Mass in G minor harks back to the Renaissance style while
exhibiting the vibrancy of new harmonic languages. Vaughan Williams
also arranged English and Scottish folk songs. Arnold
Schoenberg's Friede auf Erden is a tonal kaleidoscope, whose
tonal centers are constantly shifting (his harmonically innovative
Verklärte
Nacht for strings dates from the same period).
At the end of the nineteenth century and the
start of the twentieth, male voice choirs became popular with the
coal miners of South Wales, and numerous
choirs were established including the Treorchy
Male Choir and
Pontypridd Male Voice Choir. Although the mining communities
which gave rise to these choirs largely died out in the 1970s and
1980s with the decline of the Welsh coal industry, many of these
choirs continue, and are seen as a traditional part of Welsh
culture.
The advent of atonality and other non-traditional
harmonic systems and techniques in the 20th century also affected
choral music. Serial music is represented by choral works by
Arnold
Schoenberg, including the anthem "Dreimal Tausend Jahre," while
the the composer's signature use of sprechstimme is evident in his
psalm "De Profundis." Paul
Hindemith's distinctive modal language is represented by both
his a cappella Mass and his Six Chansons on texts by Rilke, while a
more contrapuntally dissonant style comes through in his secular
requiem, When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd. Olivier
Messiaen also demonstrates dissonant counterpoint in his Cinq
Rechants, which tell the Tristan and Isolde story. Charles
Ives' psalm settings exemplify the composer's incomparably
radical harmonic language. Tone clusters and aleatory elements play
a prominent role in the choral music of Krzysztof
Penderecki, who wrote the St. Luke Passio, and Gyorgy
Ligeti, who wrote both a Requiem and a separate Lux Aeterna.
Milton
Babbitt incorporated integral serialism into works for
children's chorus, while Daniel
Pinkham wrote for choir and electronic tape. Meredith
Monk's Panda Chant and Astronaut Anthem explore overtones in an
unconventional text setting. Though difficult and rarely performed
by amateurs, pieces that demonstrate such unfamiliar idioms have
found their way into the repertories of the finest
semi-professional and professional choirs around the world.
More accessible styles of choral music include
that by Benjamin
Britten, including his War Requiem,
Five Flower Songs, and Rejoice
in the Lamb. Francis
Poulenc's Motets pour le temps de noël, Gloria, and Mass in G
are often performed. A primitivist approach is exemplified by
Carl
Orff's widely performed Carmina
Burana. In the United
States, Aaron
Copland, Samuel
Barber, and Randall
Thompson wrote signature American pieces. In Eastern Europe,
Béla
Bartók and Zoltán
Kodály wrote a small amount of music for choirs. Frank
Martin's Mass for double choir combines modality and allusion
to Medieval and Renaissance forms with a distinctly modern harmonic
language and has become the composer's most performed work.
Sacred
Minimalism is represented by Arvo Pärt,
whose Johannespassion and Magnificat have received regular
performances; The music of John Tavener
(Song for Athene) and Henryk
Gorecki (Totus Tuus) also receives frequent playings within
this genre. American minimalism and post minimalism are represented
by Steve
Reich's Desert
Music, choral excerpts from Philip
Glass's Einstein
on the Beach and John
Coolidge Adams's Death
of Klinghoffer, and David Lang's
Pulitzer Prize-winning Little Match Girl Passion.
Black Spirituals
came into greater prominence and arrangements of such spirituals
became part of the standard choral repertoire. Notable composers
and arrangers of choral music in this tradition include William
Dawson, Jester
Hairston and Moses
Hogan.
During the mid 20th century, barbershop quartets
began experimenting with combining larger ensembles together into
choruses which sing barbershop music in 4 parts, often with
staging, choreography and costumes. The first international
barbershop chorus contest was held in 1953 and continues to this
day.
During the late 20th century, one of the major
areas of growth in the choral movement has been in the areas of
LGBT choruses.
Starting around 1979, gay men's choruses were founded within a
period of months in major U.S. cities such as New York, Los
Angeles, Seattle and Dallas. Over the last quarter century the
number of such groups, men's, women's and mixed, has exploded.
GALA
Choruses, an associative group, now has well-over 100 member
choruses throughout the world.
At the turn of the 21st century, choral music has
received a resurgence of interest partly due to a renewed interest
in accessible choral idioms. Multi-cultural influences are found in
Osvaldo
Golijov's St. Mark Passion, which melds the Bach-style passion
form with Latin American street music, and Chen Yi's Chinese
Myths Cantata melds atonal idioms with traditional Chinese melodies
played on traditional Chinese instruments. Some composers began to
earn their reputation based first and foremost on their choral
output, with the highly popular John Rutter,
Morten
Lauridsen, and Eric
Whitacre being three of the most well-known examples. The large
scale dramatic works of Karl Jenkins
seem to hearken back to the theatricality of Orff, and the music of
James
MacMillan continues the tradition of boundary-pushing choral
works from the United Kingdom begun by Britten, Walton, and
Leighton. Meanwhile, prominent primarily orchestral composers such
as Augusta
Read Thomas, Sofia
Gubaidulina, Aaron Jay
Kernis, and Thomas Ades
still contribute vital additions to the choral repertoire.
See also
References
External links
- International Federation of Choral Music
- The Boy Choir & Soloist Directory
- Choral Public Domain Library
- ChoralNet
- Church Music (Public Domain Choral Music)
- Database of British Choirs
- Art of the States: Information and free recordings of several choral works
- 21st century Chorister
- A history of UK cathedral choirs and choir schools
- The Association of Gaelic Choirs
- Côr Meibion Pontypridd - Pontypridd Male Voice Choir
choral in Breton: Laz-kanañ
choral in Bulgarian: Хор
choral in Catalan: Cor (música)
choral in Czech: Pěvecký sbor
choral in Danish: Kor
choral in German: Chor (Musik)
choral in Estonian: Koorilaul
choral in Spanish: Coro
choral in Esperanto: Ĥoro
choral in Basque: Abesbatza
choral in French: Chorale
choral in Korean: 합창
choral in Indonesian: Paduan suara
choral in Italian: Coro (musica)
choral in Hebrew: מקהלה
choral in Lithuanian: Choras
choral in Malay (macrolanguage): Koir
choral in Dutch: Koor (zang)
choral in Japanese: 合唱
choral in Norwegian: Sangkor
choral in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kor
choral in Polish: Chór
choral in Portuguese: Grupo coral
choral in Quechua: Takich'unku
choral in Russian: Хор
choral in Simple English: Choir
choral in Slovenian: Pevski zbor
choral in Serbian: Хор
choral in Finnish: Kuoro
choral in Swedish: Kör
choral in Vietnamese: Hợp xướng
choral in Ukrainian: Хор (колектив)
choral in Chinese: 合唱