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The Mormon Tabernacle Choir

A Biography

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
A first-of-its-kind history, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir tells the epic story of how an all-volunteer group founded by persecuted religious outcasts grew into a multimedia powerhouse synonymous with the mainstream and with Mormonism itself.

Drawing on decades of work observing and researching the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Michael Hicks examines the personalities, decisions, and controversies that shaped "America's choir." Here is the miraculous story behind the Tabernacle's world-famous acoustics, the anti-Mormonism that greeted early tours, the clashes with Church leaders over repertoire and presentation, the radio-driven boom in popularity, the competing visions of rival conductors, and the Choir's aspiration to be accepted within classical music even as Mormons sought acceptance within American culture at large. Everything from Billboard hits to TV appearances to White House performances paved the way for Mormonism's crossover triumph. Yet, as Hicks shows, such success raised fundamental concerns regarding the Choir's mission, functions, and image.
| Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Introduction 1. Books and Angels 2. Buildings and Professors 3. "My Tabernacle 'Mormon' Choir" 4. The Power of the Air 5. From within the Shadow 6. A Cultural Necessity 7. Soft Sell 8. The Endless Postlude Notes Index | Finalist, Utah Book Award for Nonfiction, Utah Center for the Book, 2016. Honorable Mention, Best Biography, Mormon History Association, 2016. — Mormon History Association
|Michael Hicks is a professor of music at Brigham Young University and the author of Mormonism and Music: A History and Sixties Rock: Garage, Psychedelic, and Other Satisfactions.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2015
      A history of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, an institution that keeps most of its controversies behind closed doors.Composer, performer and scholar Hicks (Music/Brigham Young Univ.; Henry Cowell, Bohemian, 2003, etc.) documents plenty of intrigue in the leadership, mission and repertoire of "America's choir," while acknowledging the considerable challenges of his endeavor: "The Tabernacle Choir is a close-knit family. And close-knit families often stiffen their ranks against outsiders. The current handbook of the Choir may not be shown to anyone who is not a member of the Choir. Choir members are not to write about the Choir in blogs. And they are required to secure permission from the Choir President before speaking to 'the media.' " Yet music has been integral to the image of Mormonism practically since the beginning of the religion, through a 19th century when making a joyful noise in church was spiritually suspect to Protestant evangelicals. As the success of the choir "more than any other institution...domesticated the image of Mormonism," offsetting the association with polygamy and other moral curiosities, it kept pace with the times by attracting a devoted following through radio, TV and a series of best-selling recordings that mixed the secular and the spiritual. By the 21st century, "the Tabernacle Choir sold out Denver's Pepsi Stadium-fifteen thousand seats-three days before the Rolling Stones, another major brand name, sold just thirteen thousand seats in the same venue." It also adapted to the high-tech spectacle that modern performance seemed to demand. Yet the hundreds of choir members remained unpaid and all but anonymous, serving as musical missionaries, and the institution become more closely associated with conservative political partisanship as it continued to struggle with what one leader called "the colored problem." Though much of the writing is academically dry, this history is more provocative than readers may suspect.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2015

      In this scholarly biography of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Hicks (music, Brigham Young Univ.; Mormonism and Music; Sixties Rock) largely follows the historical leadership of the choir, the shifting beliefs on song choices (hymns, classical pieces, popular music, etc.), and the development of the recognizable organization the group is today. Tracking the choir from its humble beginnings in 1836 to moves into radio, international touring, and TV and film appearances, the material is as expansive in scope as the choir's reach has become. While there is an unfortunate lack of personal interviews and anecdotes, making the book more erudite than immediately accessible to the casual reader, Hicks addresses the issue in the work's introduction. He explains that he had difficulty finding current choir members who would break rank and speak about their experiences as they felt it would go against their choral agreements. The details of all that this large, volunteer-based choir has accomplished are intriguing, particularly as they balance their international celebrity status with their duties to the church. VERDICT Recommended for those researching the history of the Tabernacle Choir, or general fans of the group looking for a deeper look at its development.--Katie Lawrence, Chicago

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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