San Francisco Girls Chorus

San Francisco Girls Chorus is a regional center for music education and performance for girls and young women, ages 7–18, based in San Francisco. More than 300 singers from 160 schools in 48 San Francisco Bay Area cities and towns participate in this internationally recognized program. The Chorus has been described as "a model in the country for training girls' voices" by the California Arts Council.

SFGC was founded by Elizabeth Appling, who served as the organization's Artistic Director until her retirement in 1992. She was succeeded by Sharon J. Paul, who led the chorus until just after its 21st Anniversary in 2000. The chorus underwent an interim year under the leadership of Magen Solomon, after which the helm was passed on to Susan McMane. The current artistic director is Lisa Bielawa, who is well known for her broadcasts in Berlin at former Tempelhof Airport (Spring 2013), and at Crissy Field in San Francisco (Fall 2013). Bielawa currently resides in New York.

In 2011, The San Francisco Girls Chrorus collaborated with composer Tania Leon and award-winning poet and writer Carlos Pintado on “Rimas Tropicales”, based on Carlos Pintado’s poetry.

The Chorus School

The Chorus School of SFGC comprises four training stages that are specifically designed to increase technical skills, stamina and discipline in accordance with the chorister's age and physical development. The Chorus School has been supervised since its inception by Elizabeth Avakian, who also directs Level IV.

The Level IV Ensemble is a smaller, select group of girls within Level IV. Girls who wish to join must audition during the Chorus' Summer Music camp. The Ensemble has occasional extra practices, as well as many extra performances. They are asked to perform when the venues are too small to accommodate the entire Level IV. Most of their performances are around Christmas and in the Spring. They sometimes memorize extra verses to songs the rest of the chorus learns.

At the end of the season, Level IV choristers must pass a theory-based qualifying exam before being considered for graduation from the Chorus School. Once graduated, choristers may either choose to audition for Chorissima, return to level IV, or leave the Chorus.

More detail about the curriculum can be found here: SFGC: Curriculum

Chorissima and the Alumnae Chorus

Chorissima

Chorissima is the concert, recording, and touring ensemble of the San Francisco Girls Chorus, and is conducted by Artistic Director Valerie Sante-Agaite. The dedicated young artists of the ensemble, ages 11–18, present a season concert series in the San Francisco Bay Area, tour nationally and internationally, and appear regularly with renowned artistic partners, including the San Francisco Opera and San Francisco Symphony. Chorissima has also performed with numerous esteemed Bay Area ensembles such as Chanticleer, Kronos Quartet, Berkeley Symphony, ODC/Dance, San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, and others.

Chorissima has undertaken ten international tours, one of which was in July 2007 when the ensemble represented the United States in the World Vision Children's Choir Festival in Seoul, South Korea, and in the Gateway to Music Festival at the Forbidden City Concert Hall in Beijing. In August 2005, Chorissima was invited to perform at the prestigious 7th World Symposium on Choral Music in Kyoto and also at the Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, Japan.

Chorissima performed at the inauguration of President Barack Obama in January 2009. They sang a total of 20 minutes, as a prelude to the ceremony.

Before Cuba was recently opened to US citizens to visit, Chorissima toured there in July 2011, visiting Havana, Santa Clara, and Matanzas on an international tour.

Most recently, they sang in the New York Biennial in 2016. They were the only group from outside NY invited to perform there.

The San Francisco Girls Chorus has produced six solo CD recordings including: Voices of Hope and Peace that includes "Anne Frank: A Living Voice" by an American composer Linda Tutas Haugen; Christmas, a selection of diverse holiday songs; Crossroads, a collection of world folk music; and Music From the Venetian Ospedali, a disc of Italian Baroque music, for which The New Yorker proclaimed the Chorus "tremendously accomplished."

Chorissima's most recent solo CD recording is named Heaven and Earth, using recordings from 2008-09. This CD is their first double-disc release.

The ensemble can also be heard on several recordings with the San Francisco Symphony, including three GRAMMY award-winning CDs Orff: Carmina Burana (1992); Stravinsky: The Firebird, The Rite of Spring, Persephone (1999); Mahler: Symphony No. 8 (2008); and Mahler: Symphony No. 3 and Kindertotenlieder (2004). Chorissima has appeared in two feature films, The Talented Mr. Ripley (2000) and What Dreams May Come (1998).

Chorissima is professionally represented by California Artists Management.

Alumnae Chorus

The newly formed San Francisco Girls Chorus Alumnae Chorus, directed by the Artistic Director, took the stage for the first time in concert Sunday, December 2, 2007 at St. John's Presbyterian Church, San Francisco. This ensemble is composed of women from mid-teens to mid-thirties, all of whom are graduates of the San Francisco Girls Chorus School. Some are lauretes of the San Francisco Girls Chorus (Chorissima). The Alumnae Chorus has two scheduled performances per season. The Alumnae Chorus is featured on the newest CD release Heaven and Earth (2009).

Summer Music Camp

Chorus camp is for Levels II, III, IV and Chorissima. (Level II attendance is not mandatory.)

It is held at Rio Lindo Adventist Academy in Healdsburg, California.

The girls prepare their music for the regular season, have classes in Music Theory, Sightsinging, and Dance. They also participate in fun activities such as the Counselor Hunt, Big sister/Little sister Night and the Square Dance.

Discography

SFGC Music

Awards and honors

References

  1. Benson, Heidi (2009-01-17). "S.F. boys, girls choruses go to Washington". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-02-23.

External links

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