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Dec 1st, 2010
Vienna Boys Choir
website
For over 500 years the Vienna Boys’ Choir has been traveling the globe astounding
audiences with their obvious discipline, impressive range, and overwhelming joy for
song. When the choristers visited Charleston in 2008, their holiday
performance was a sell-out, setting the stage for the holiday season. We are
pleased to welcome the boys back for this family program and another captivating
holiday performance.
“World renowned for their heavenly voices and remarkable talent…”
The Washington City Paper

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Vienna Boys Choir History
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.
Musicians like Heinrich Isaac, Paul Hofhaimer, Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber,
Johann Joseph Fux, Christoph Willibald Gluck, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Antonio
Caldara, Antonio Salieri and Anton Bruckner worked with the choir. Composers
Jacobus Gallus, Franz Schubert, and conductors Hans Richter, Felix Mottl and
Clemens Krauss were themselves choristers. Brothers Joseph and Michael Haydn were
members of the choir of St. Stephen's Cathedral, and sang frequently with the
imperial boys' choir.
In 1918, after the breakdown of the Habsburg empire, the Austrian government
took over the court opera (i.e. the opera, its orchestra and the adult singers),
but not the choir boys. The Choir owes its survival to the initiative of Josef
Schnitt, who became Dean of the Imperial Chapel in 1921. Schnitt established the
boys' choir as a private institution: the former court choir boys became the Wiener
Sängerknaben, the imperial uniform was replaced by the sailor suit, then the height
of boys' fashion. Funding was not enough to pay for the boys' upkeep, and in 1926
the choir started to give concerts outside of the chapel, performing motets,
secular works, and - at the boys' request - children's operas. The impact was
amazing: Within a year, the Wiener Sängerknaben were performing in Berlin (where
Erich Kleiber conducted them), Prague and Zurich. Athens and Riga (1928) followed,
then Spain, France, Denmark, Norway and Sweden (1929), the United States (1932),
Australia (1934) and South America (1936).
Today there are around 100 choristers between the ages of ten and fourteen,
divided into four touring choirs. The four choirs give around 300 concerts and
performances each year in front of almost half a million people. Each group spends
nine to eleven weeks of the school year on tour. They visit virtually all European
countries, and they are frequent guests in Asia, Australia and the Americas.
Together with members of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and the Vienna State
Opera Chorus, the Wiener Sängerknaben maintain the tradition of the imperial
musicians: as Hofmusikkapelle they provide the music for the Sunday Mass in
Vienna's Imperial Chapel, as they have done since 1498.
The choir is a private, not-for-profit organization. The eight members of the
choir's governing body oversee its development and guarantee its future. Dr. Eugen
Jesser became the choir's president in 2001, and its director in 2003. Gerald Wirth
became the choir's artistic director in 2001.
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