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Choirboys and Choirgirls in the Victorian Church of England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Walter Hillsman*
Affiliation:
University of Oxford

Extract

Although the roles played by children in recent centuries in English church music have varied enormously, it is probably fair to say that choirs with at least some boys’ or girls’ voices have proven more important in musical, ecclesiastical, and social developments than those with none. The most obvious example of this is the choir of men and boys, which has constituted a conspicuous feature of cathedral and some collegiate music since the Middle Ages, except, of course, during the Commonwealth. As women and girls have until very recently been regarded as inappropriate in such music, it is difficult to imagine that the breadth of achievement in musical composition and performance standards associated with these choirs would have been possible if they had contained only men and no boys.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1994

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References

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54 Much of the information in this paragraph is drawn from conversations with Denis Townhill of Edinburgh (20 July 1993), Paul Trepte of Ely (19 July 1993), and Richard Seal of Salisbury (13 July 1993).

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