New Zealand Secondary Students' Choir

The New Zealand Secondary Students' Choir (NZSSC) is a national choir of New Zealand that consists of around 50 singers selected from full-time secondary school students every two years. Between auditions, each new choir meets around six times to learn new repertoire, tour both urban and rural parts of New Zealand, provide choral workshops for schools and tour internationally. The choir has received international attention and critical acclaim from overseas audiences but limited publicity in New Zealand itself. Their repertoire, although widely varied in style, age and language, specifically emphasises works by New Zealand composers and music from Māori and other Polynesian cultures. Performances by the choir regularly include commissioned works showcasing these uniquely New Zealand traditions.

History

The New Zealand Secondary Students' Choir roots started in a choral course for secondary school students in the 1960s with the first performance as a choir of its kind in 1967 under the musical direction of Malcolm Rickard. The choir was formalised and named in 1986 by Dr. Guy Jansen primarily as a training ground for the (formerly) New Zealand National Youth Choir however, two years later, Roger Stevenson took musical directorship, turning the choir into a separate entity with the New Zealand Secondary Students' Choir becoming a charitable trust in 1997. Late in 2000, the choir appointed Elise Bradley as Musical Director. For each NZSSC that she directed, Elise Bradley appointed a professional tutoring team to assist her and also took on conducting trainees, most notably of whom was Andrew Withington who would become musical director of the choir in 2009. The appointment of tutors by the Musical Director has since continued, contributing greatly to the unique nature of each new choir.

In 2004, the choir performed in the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene, Oregon, USA. The NZSSC then toured Canada, taking three first-place awards (Mixed Voice Youth Choir, Youth Choir and Folk & Cultural Traditions) at the International Choral Kathaumixw in Powell River. In this, the 11th biennial competition, the NZSSC earned more awards than any other choir in any year of competition over the history of the competition; a record which still stands. The 2005–2006 choir competed in the Hong Kong International Youth & Children’s Choir Festival where it took the top award, "The World’s Choir" title and directly following this the choir travelled to Xiamen, China where it competed in the World Choir Games, gaining a Gold Award and Champion in the Mixed Youth Choir category and a Silver Award in the Folklore a cappella category. Elise Bradley resigned as Musical Director of the NZSSC in the beginning of 2007 in order to take up the position of Artistic Director of the Toronto Children's Chorus. As a past member and long-standing tutor of the choir, Robert Wiremu agreed to take on a temporary position as the Musical Director in late 2007 and led their successful participation in a non-competitive South American festival tour. In 2009, Andrew Withington was appointed as the Musical Director of the NZSSC.

Awards (incomplete)

Year Competition Category Award Location
2004 11th International Choral Kathaumixw Mixed Choir First Place Powell River, Canada
2004 11th International Choral Kathaumixw Youth Choir First Place Powell River, Canada
2004 11th International Choral Kathaumixw Folk & Cultural Traditions First Place Powell River, Canada
2006 Hong Kong International Youth & Children’s Choir Festival Grand Prize "The World’s Choir" Hong Kong
2006 Hong Kong International Youth & Children’s Choir Festival Youth Choir SATB Gold A (Winner) Hong Kong
2006 Hong Kong International Youth & Children’s Choir Festival Folklore Gold B (Shared Winner) Hong Kong
2006 4th World Choir Games Mixed Youth Choir Gold (Champion) Xiamen, China
2006 4th World Choir Games Folklore a cappella Silver Xiamen, China

Discography (incomplete)

Albums

DVDs

See also

New Zealand Youth Choir
Voices New Zealand Chamber Choir

External links

References

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