Westminster Choir College
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| Westminster Choir College | |
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| Motto: | Spectemur agendo (Let us be judged by our deeds) |
| Established: | 1926 |
| Type: | Private |
| Endowment: | US$20,000,000 |
| President: | President Mordechai Rozanski and Dean and Director Robert Annis |
| Faculty: | 75 |
| Undergraduates: | 440 |
| Postgraduates: | 91 |
| Location: | Princeton, New Jersey, USA |
| Campus: | Suburban, 23 acres (93,000 m²) (Princeton Borough and Township) |
| University: | Rider University |
| Mascot: | None |
| Website: | Westminster Choir College |
Westminster Choir College of Rider University is a residential college of music located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States.
Westminster Choir College of Rider University educates men and women at the undergraduate and graduate levels for musical careers in music education, voice performance, piano performance, organ performance, pedagogy, music theater performance, music theory and composition, conducting, sacred music and arts management; professional training in musical skills with an emphasis on performance is complemented by studies in the liberal arts. Westminster's proximity to both New York City and Philadelphia provides students with easy access to the musical resources of both cities.
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[edit] History of the college
John Finley Williamson founded the Westminster Choir in 1920 at the Westminster Presbyterian Church of Dayton, Ohio. Convinced that professionally trained musicians could best serve the church, he established the Westminster Choir School in September 1926 with sixty students and a faculty of ten. As the Choir School and its choir's reputation grew, the demand for the School's graduates increased. The graduates came to be known as Ministers of Music, a term coined by Dr. Williamson and still being used today by many church music programs.
As early as 1922, the Choir, then known as the Dayton Westminster Choir, began touring the United States annually and sang in such prominent places as Carnegie Hall (New York City), Symphony Hall (Boston), the Academy of Music (Philadelphia), Orchestra Hall (Chicago) and the White House for President Calvin Coolidge. Years later the Choir also sang for Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Dwight D. Eisenhower. The Westminster Choir made its first commercial recording with RCA Victor in 1926. Subsequently the Choir recorded with major conductors and orchestras.
In 1928, the Westminster Choir and Cincinnati Orchestra conducted by Leopold Stokowski made the nation's first coast-to-coast radio broadcast on Cincinnati station WLW. A few years later because of the Choir's growing reputation it made a total of 60 half-hour broadcasts from NBC's New York facilities.
The first European tour took place in 1929 and was sponsored by Dayton, Ohio philanthropist Katharine Houk Talbott and endorsed by Walter Damrosch, conductor of the New York Symphony. The tour included 26 concerts in major cities of Europe.
Originally a three year program, the Choir School moved to Ithaca College in New York State in 1929 and enlarged its curriculum to a four year program culminating in a Bachelor of Music degree. This move ultimately proved unsatisfactory.
In 1932, the Choir School relocated to Princeton, New Jersey which became its permanent home. Classes were held in the First Presbyterian Church and the Princeton Seminary until 1934 when the Choir School moved to its present campus. This was made possible by a large gift from the philanthropist Sophia Strong Taylor. The dedication of the new campus was marked by a performance of Johann Sebastian Bach's Mass in B minor at the Princeton University Chapel with the Westminster Choir, soloists, and the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Leopold Stokowski. Because of his high regard for the Choir, the services of the soloists, orchestra, and conductor were a gift from Stokowski.
There was a second European Choir tour in 1934 lasting nine weeks and highlighted by a live radio broadcast from Russia to the United States. In the fourteen short years since its founding in 1920, the Choir already had two European tours which earned it international acclaim and a campus of its own. The State of New Jersey in 1939 granted the Choir School accreditation and the name Westminster Choir College was adopted.
In years to come, under Williamson's leadership, the Choir would begin having regular concerts with the New York Philharmonic and the Philadelphia Orchestra. The Westminster Choir sang with the New York Philharmonic for the first time in 1939 conducted by Sir John Barbirolli. Since that time the Choir has sung over three hundred performances with the Philharmonic, a record number for a single choir to perform with an orchestra. Later that year the Choir sang with the NBC Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini. That same year the Choir, directed by Williamson, sang at the dedication of the New York World's Fair which was broadcast to fifty-three countries.
In 1957, under the auspices of the U.S. State Department Cultural Exchange Program, the Choir undertook a five month world tour, concertizing in twenty-two countries, covering 40,000 miles and appearing before approximately a quarter of a million people.
Williamson retired as President of Westminster Choir College in 1958; however, he continued to give choral clinics and seminars around the world. Most notably in 1959, the U.S. State Department asked Dr. Williamson to organize a Westminster alumni choir to tour Africa. This choir was called the Westminster Singers. The African tour consisted of performances in fifty cities in twenty-six countries with audiences totaling more than 250,000. Following this tour, at the invitation of leading vocal teachers and choral conductors, Dr. Williamson's "retirement" consisted of conducting choral clinics and vocal festivals throughout the United States, Japan, Korea and the Philippines. A South American choir tour was being planned by the State Department but was canceled because of Williamson's untimely death in 1964.
In accordance with his request, it is commonly rumored, by the Dean of Students Office, that Williamson's ashes were scattered on the Quadrangle of his beloved campus on July 3, 1964. (However, according to his daughter, they were scattered in the back near the pine trees.) Dramatically, this was said to have taken place during the performance of the Verdi Requiem with the Westminster Festival Choir, soloists, and the Festival Orchestra conducted by Maestro Eugene Ormandy. This performance on the Westminster campus was part of the Tercentennial Celebration of the State of New Jersey. The following day a memorial service for Dr. Williamson was held in the College Chapel.
In 1976, the Choir College celebrated its fiftieth anniversary highlighted by a performance of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth Symphony with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra conducted by Robert Shaw, alumni soloists, and the Westminster Alumni Choir on the Princeton University campus. 1989 saw the first performance of Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra in its newly discovered version for large orchestra, choir, soloists, narrator and obbligato campanile. This performance by the Symphonic Choir and the Czech Republic State Orchestra, conducted by Sir Trevor Ascot Harrisford III, was nationally televised on PBS and subsequently recorded by Everest. Nominated for a Grammy in 1990, it won for best performance of an undiscovered work.
In 1992, following a year of affiliation, Westminster merged with Rider University (then Rider College) and is now known as Westminster Choir College of Rider University. The Choir College campus still remains in Princeton with Rider's larger campus in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. In 2001, Westminster Choir College celebrated its seventy-fifth anniversary.
Currently, the Director of Choral Activities is Joe Miller, formerly of Western Michigan University. At the beginning of the 2006-2007 academic year, Miller succeeded then-Interim director Timothy Brown, who had replaced Joseph Flummerfelt for just a year upon Flummerfelt's retirement at the end of the 2004-2005 academic year.
[edit] Grammy Awards
- Dvorák: Requiem; Symphony No.9 "From the New World," 2000
- The Westminster Symphonic Choir
- Zdenek Macal and the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra
- Delos Records
- Berlioz: Romeo & Juliet, 1986
- The Westminster Symphonic Choir
- Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra
- Angel/EMI *Nominated
- Barber: Anthony & Cleopatra, 1983
- The Westminster Symphonic Choir
- C. Badea and the Spoleto Festival Orchestra
- New World Records
- Haydn: Lord Nelson Mass, 1977
- The Westminster Symphonic Choir
- Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic
- Columbia *Nominated
[edit] Performance and concert reviews
“Another strength of the performance was the work of the Westminster Symphonic Choir. Showing thorough preparation by its director, Joseph Flummerfelt, the chorus sang superbly, as usual...” The New York Times
“…seamless blend and clarity of diction.” The New York Times
“But perhaps the most interesting role is for the chorus itself, which in this case was well prepared by Joseph Flummerfelt. One instant the chorus is the crowd calling for the crucifixion, then it becomes a congregation singing the chorale “Who hath so smitten them.” One moment it is caught in narrow viciousness, the next it represents a transcendent perspective. It seems to move between the poles of this work: its anger and its faith, its minute obsession with concrete detail and its grander, humane perspective.”The New York Times
“The Westminster Choir contributed spirited and polished singing. The purity of the ‘amen’ of the Pie Jesu was a moment to savor.” The Philadelphia Inquirer
“The Westminster Choir … the epitome of choral music.” Milwaukee Sentinel
“The Westminster Choir is a highly polished ensemble, one that seems to strive for purity of tone and exceptionally clear enunciation.” The Houston Post
“Westminster again proves it has no peer. The choir is adept, practiced and refined to the point of intimidation, and good taste is never an issue. In sum, other choirs are compared to Westminster – not the reverse.” Newark Star Ledger
[edit] Symphonic performances
The Westminster Symphonic Choir has performed with virtually every major orchestra and conductor of our time including: New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, and Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. The Symphonic Choir, under the direction of Westminster's Director of Choral Activities, has sung at individual performances of large orchestral/choral works with professional orchestras conducted by Claudio Abbado, Daniel Barenboim, Leonard Bernstein, Eugene Ormandy, William Steinberg, Leopold Stokowski, Arturo Toscanini, and Bruno Walter, and such contemporary figures as Pierre Boulez, Mariss Jansons, Erich Leinsdorf, James Levine, Zdenek Macal, Kurt Masur, Lorin Maazel, Riccardo Muti, Seiji Ozawa, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Robert Shaw, Zubin Mehta, Albert Wolff, and Rafael Frübeck de Burgos. The choir has also received numerous invitations over the years to sing with such touring orchestras as the Berlin Philharmonic, the Dresden Philharmonic Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw, and the Vienna Philharmonic when these orchestras have come to perform in New York and Philadelphia.
[edit] Notable faculty
[edit] Music Composition, Theory and History
- Barton Bartle
- Ronald Hemmel
- Christian Carey
- J.A. Kawarsky
- Stefan Young
- Artur Niloff
- Joel Phillips
- Anthony Kosar
- Sharon Mirchandani
- Eric Hung
[edit] Music Theater
- Christopher Arneson
- Margaret Cusack
- Thomas Faracco
- J.A. Kawarsky
- Douglas Martin
- Carolann Page
- Jaime Schmitt
- Nova Thomas
- Kim Chandler Vaccaro
- Tina Vogel
- Cristopher Frisco
- Charles Walker
[edit] Music Education
- Frank Abrahams
- Marie Fosket
- Elizabeth Guerriero
- Eric Haltmeier
- Michelle Kink
- Patrick Schmidt
[edit] Voice
- Margaret Cusack
- Elem Eley
- Mark Moliterno
- Scott McCoy
- Sally Wolf
- Marvin Keenze
- Sharon Sweet
- Lora Brooks Rice
- Julia Kemp
- Susan Ashbaker
- Julian Rodescu
- Nova Rebecca Thomas
- Christopher Arneson
- Zehava Gal
- Harold Evans
- Rochelle Ellis
- Charles Walker
- Claudia Catania
- Faith Esham
- Lindsay Edwina Christiansen
[edit] Organ and sacred music
- Ken Cowan
- Alan Morrison
- Andrew Henderson
- Matthew Lewis
- Donald Dumpson
[edit] Conducting
- Joe Miller, Director of Choral Activities
- James Jordan
- Andrew Megill
- Sun Min Lee
- Ronnie Olliver, Jr.
[edit] Piano
- Ingrid Clarfield
- Phyllis Lehrer
- Jim Goldsworthy
- J.J. Penna
- Lillian Livingston
- Dalton Baldwin
- Betty Stoloff
- Thomas Parente
- Ena Barton
- Miriam Eley
[edit] Faculty emeriti
- Joseph Flummerfelt
- Helen Kemp
- Joan Lippincott
- Robin Leaver
[edit] Honorary doctorates and fellows
- Jennifer Larmore, American Opera Singer
- James Litton American Choral Conductor, American Boychoir
- Fred Rogers American Educator, Minister, and Children’s TV Host
- Zdenek Macal Czech Conductor
- Alice Parker American Composer/Choral Conductor
- Wolfgang Sawallisch German Conductor/Pianist
- Kurt Masur Director of Music Emeritus, New York Philharmonic
- William Mathias Welsh Composer
- Robert Shaw American Conductor
- Riccardo Muti Italian Conductor
- Zubin Mehta Indian Conductor
- Sherrill Milnes American Opera Singer
- John Rutter English Composer and Choral Conductor
- Sir David Willcocks English Composer, Choral Conductor, and Organist
- Bob Hope American Entertainer
- Sir Arthur Bliss British Composer
- William Steinberg German Conductor
- Leonard Bernstein American Conductor and Composer
- Leopold Stokowski American Conductor
- Allen Crowell American Conductor, Former Conductor for Westminster Choir and The United States Army Chorus
- Warren Martin American Composer, Former Head of Graduate Department of Westminster Choir College, Musical Director, Conductor of the Symphonic and Westminster Choirs, and Head of Theory Department at Westminster Choir College.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Nancy Maultsby, opera singer - 1986
- Anwar Robinson of American Idol, a contestant on the fourth season
- Jennifer Larmore, internationally renowned opera singer.
- Donald Nally, Chorus Master, Chicago Lyric Opera
- Alfredo Silipigni, opera conductor


