Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Leeds Male Voice Choir

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Years active
  
1916 (1916) - Present

Origin
  
Leeds, United Kingdom

Leeds Male Voice Choir httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Also known as
  
Broom Excelsior Vocal Union, Broom Excelsior Male Voice Choir, Broom Male Voice Choir

Genres
  
Classical music, Pop music, Folk music, Musical theatre, Rock music

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Leeds Male Voice Choir is a choir of men founded in 1916 in Leeds, West Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. Originally formed from mining workers in Middleton, Leeds, the choir is now recognised for diversity of membership and varied and divergent repertoire .

Contents

The choir currently consists of around sixty active members and performs regularly throughout Leeds and Yorkshire. The choir is also noted for its efforts to Get Men Singing and offers annual singing workshops as part of the choir's charitable aims.

Early Years: 1916 - 1953

Formed by Thomas Crossland, the organist and choirmaster at Stourton Wesleyan Chapel the choir took its name from Broom Pit in Middleton, Leeds and was known for a time as the Broom Excelsior Male Voice performing for the first time in Stourton in September 1916. John Hickes was the conductor until 1953, overseeing the name change to Leeds Male Voice Choir in the late 1940s.

Later Years: 1953 - 2013

John Wheeler took the Director's baton in 1962 with his wife Ursula as the accompanist. He was a principal singer at Leeds Parish Church and was also conductor of Batley Male Voice Choir and Phoenix Park Male Choir in Bradford. Wheeler led the choir and began a series of exchange visits in 1969 with Dortsfeld Male Voice Choir in Dortmund, Leeds’ twin city in Germany. The choir developed a concert schedule across Yorkshire and took part in various music festivals across Northern England.

In 1970 Leeds Male Voice Choir featured as part of the '1000 Voice Choir', accompanied by the Black Dyke Band which was recorded for Stars on Sunday on ITV, the choir also featured on the accompanying album issued in the same year. In 1971 the choir took first place at the Robertshaw Music Festival in Bingley. In 1974 the choir made a TV appearance on Hughie Green’s Opportunity Knocks. In 1978 the choirs first album was released featuring some of the traditional male voice repertoire.

Under the direction of Nigel Wears the choir performed in 1988 and 1991 in the ‘Thousand Yorkshire Voices’ concerts in The Royal Albert Hall in London. Brass band accompaniment came from both Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band and Sellers International Band. The choir again returned to the Royal Albert Hall in 1994 whilst directed by David Burnett.

In 2013 led by conductor Will Prideaux the choir hosted the Sing For Heroes concert, gathering men from throughout the city to perform in Leeds Town Hall in aid of the charity Help For Heroes. The concert attracted a variety of new members and helped expand the size and quality of sound of the choir.

Recent Years: 2014 - Present

Following the appointment of Tim Knight,[7] Principal of the Yorkshire College Of Music and Drama the choir launched a series of themed concerts, performing The Best Of British at Leeds Minster in June 2014. The annual festive celebration The Spirit of Christmas launched in December 2014 at Leeds Minster and the Hollywood Heroes concert followed in 2015 to a sell out audience at Morley Town Hall. In December 2015 The Spirit of Christmas transferred to Leeds Cathedral where it has continued to be performed annually.

The choir's divergence from the traditional male voice repertoire resulted in a more international themed musical programme, further highlighted in a new recording in 2015.

Leeds Male Voice Choir celebrated one hundred years of singing in Leeds in Leeds Town Hall with Rothwell Temperance Band and The White Rosettes in September 2016 compered by Simon Lindley. Leeds City Museum presented an exhibition of the choirs history between November 2016 and February 2017.

Musical Directors

  • 1916 - 1928, Thomas Crossland
  • 1929 - 1953, John Hickes
  • 1953 - 1962, Unknown
  • 1962 - 1986, John Wheeler
  • 1987 - 1994, Nigel Wears
  • 1994 - 2004, David Burnett
  • 2004 - 2013, Michael Grant
  • 2013 - 2013 Will Prideaux
  • 2014 – Present, Tim Knight
  • References

    Leeds Male Voice Choir Wikipedia