Buildings and Professors

Author(s):  
Michael Hicks

This chapter discusses the beginnings of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. It first considers the construction of the Salt Lake Tabernacle on April 6, 1852, before turning to the schoolhouse that Brigham Young built to provide vocal lessons for as many as 200 children at a time under the direction of David Calder, who championed a modified form of John Curwen's Tonic sol-fa method. Graduates of the Tonic sol-fa classes sang in concerts in the Salt Lake Theater, the dedication of which featured an anthem, “God Bless Brigham Young,” or “The Saints' National Anthem”; this suggested that the Mormons now saw their society as self-contained, a new “nation” outside the nation they had left. The music to this new anthem was composed by Charles John Thomas, the newly appointed director of the theater orchestra and, on Sundays, of the Tabernacle Choir. The chapter also considers the acoustics of the Salt Lake Tabernacle, the Tabernacle organ, and the appointment of Thomas Griggs as the new Choir conductor on August 19, 1880.

Author(s):  
Michael Hicks

This chapter discusses the activities of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir under conductor Anthony Lund, with particular emphasis on its foray into broadcasting. In October 1915, the Salt Lake Telegram reported that Evan Stephens was being fired. A high Church committee, it said, had notified the First Presidency that it was time for Stephens to go in favor of a younger and presumably more flexible, less autocratic man. Lund was chosen as the new conductor, with Brigham Cecil Gates as his assistant. This chapter first considers Stephens's resignation as Choir conductor before describing Lund's initiatives for the Choir. It also looks at the Choir's repertoire and recordings as well as its television and radio broadcasts. Finally, it cites the appointment of Spencer Cornwall as Lund's successor.


1899 ◽  
Vol 48 (1229supp) ◽  
pp. 19710-19710
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