Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on Terminology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Precedents, Polity and Politics
- 2 Clergy
- 3 Churchmanship, Furnishings and Functions
- 4 The Musical Foundation
- 5 The Chapel Royal Music Collection
- 6 Singing the Liturgy
- 7 Organs
- 8 Boy Choristers
- 9 Gentleman Singers
- 10 Organists and Composers
- 11 The Chapel Royal's Legacy
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Lords Lieutenant, 1801–1922
- Appendix B Clergy of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix C Extant Chapel Royal Music Volumes (RCB MS 1113)
- Appendix D Boy Choristers of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix E Gentlemen Singers of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix F Organists of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix G Fragment of a Juvenile Chant by C. V. Stanford
- Bibliography
- Index
- Irish Musical Studies Previous volumes
9 - Gentleman Singers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A Note on Terminology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Precedents, Polity and Politics
- 2 Clergy
- 3 Churchmanship, Furnishings and Functions
- 4 The Musical Foundation
- 5 The Chapel Royal Music Collection
- 6 Singing the Liturgy
- 7 Organs
- 8 Boy Choristers
- 9 Gentleman Singers
- 10 Organists and Composers
- 11 The Chapel Royal's Legacy
- Conclusion
- Appendix A Lords Lieutenant, 1801–1922
- Appendix B Clergy of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix C Extant Chapel Royal Music Volumes (RCB MS 1113)
- Appendix D Boy Choristers of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix E Gentlemen Singers of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix F Organists of the Chapel Royal
- Appendix G Fragment of a Juvenile Chant by C. V. Stanford
- Bibliography
- Index
- Irish Musical Studies Previous volumes
Summary
Numbers of gentlemen of the choir
Less than two weeks after the first service, a press report stated that ‘a Choir has already begun its formation at the Castle Chapel under Mr. Barton’. John Barton, who would be a member of the choir for over thirty years, was evidently one of the founding singers, although this suggestion that he was master of the choir is not substantiated by any other evidence. There is no surviving official documentation of the choir in the first years, but an official of the Irish Public Records Office claimed in 1905 to have found ‘a warrant establishing a staff of laymen for the chapel’ from 1816. Since the majority of the lay staff of the Chapel (as per the annual parliamentary estimates, from 1831 onwards) were musicians, it seems very likely that this document was the first official authorization for the payment of singers for the Chapel. No evidence of this document survives, which would suggest that it perished in the explosion that destroyed the Irish Public Records Office in 1922.
A list of the members of the staff of the Chapel from 1823 includes the names of the organist James Duncan, and three gentlemen of the choir: John Barton, Charles Mills and George Mills. These names (‘Mr G. Mills’, ‘Mr C. Mills’ and ‘Mr Barton’) are also to be found neatly pencilled above hooks in one of the former robes cupboards in the Chapel, alongside the name ‘Gaudry’. The coincidence of these names suggests that the three men listed in 1823 had been members of the choir since Richard Gaudry's time as a chorister (between c. 1815 and 1817). John Barton, as we have seen, was a member of the choir from the beginning of 1815, and George Mills seems to have been a member of the choir from 1819 or earlier.
It would appear therefore that for around the first decade of the choir's existence, there was only one man to each of the lower parts – George Mills (alto), John Barton (tenor), and Charles Mills (bass) – although, as we shall see, it is possible that there were other unpaid voluntary singers also whose names have not been recorded. George Mills was replaced by William Henry Hamerton early in 1824.
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- Information
- The Choral Foundation of the Chapel Royal, Dublin CastleConstitution, Liturgy, Music, 1814-1922, pp. 175 - 192Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023