Formed in 1920, it currently comprises the following choirs:
Sydney Philharmonia Chamber Singers, formerly the Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir; an auditioned chamber choir of around 32 voices
Sydney Philharmonia Symphony Chorus; an auditioned choral orchestral choir of 100 voices
Vox; an auditioned young adult vocal ensemble for 18- to 30-year-olds
Sydney Philharmonia Festival Chorus; a large community choir of up to 450 voices
ChorusOz; an un-auditioned choir formed annually to rehearse and perform a single major choral work over the course of a long weekend.
Christmas Choir; or Messiah Choir – an un-auditioned choir formed annually to rehearse and perform performances of either Handel's Messiah or Carols at the House in December.
History
The choir formed in 1920 as the Hurlstone Park Choral Society and gave its first "Glee Performance", conducted by Tom Downer, on 9 September 1920 in hut 13, Randwick Hospital. The program was listed as Come where my love lies dreaming, Great God of wonders, There is music by the river and Sleep, baby, sleep. The first public performance, also conducted by Tom Downer, was on 3 November 1920 at the Masonic Hall, Dulwich Hill and the program was listed as Come where my love lies dreaming, Great God of wonders, There is music by the river, Sleep, baby, sleep, Oh hush thee my baby, Moonlight, The bells of St Marys and God save the King. The earliest performances to have been noticed in the press were at the Masonic Hall, Dulwich Hill, in 1922[1] and at St Clement's School Hall, Marrickville, in 1923.[2]
In 1922 the choir gave its first performance of a major choral work, 'Assisting Marrickville Choral Society' in Handel's Messiah. The next performance of Messiah was in 1927, and then annually in a sequence interrupted only in 1933 and 1943, until 2010.
Also in 1927, and continuing to 1939, the society entered Eisteddfods in various NSW locations, winning places on nine occasions. The prize money often had a significant bearing on the organisation's financial situation, which was always precarious. Despite its financial situation, in 1961 the Hurlstone Choral Society felt able to make an unsolicited gift of £50 to its 'major rival', the Sydney Royal Philharmonic Society, which was 'broke and in danger of extinction'.[3]
The choir changed its name to Hurlstone Choral Society in 1937, Sydney Philharmonia Society in 1969[4] and Sydney Philharmonia Limited in 1974.[5] It employed its first professional manager in 1974.
Sydney Philharmonia’s singing commitments have grown to the point where a typical year (2018) sees it perform 12 performances in its own concerts and 20 performances with the Sydney Symphony. Other commitments such as corporate events, commercial concerts and the like mean that the organisation mounts around 50 performances a year.[8][10]
Sydney Philharmonia Choirs in a formal concert in the Sydney Opera House
Sydney Philharmonia Vox on television show The X Factor
Sydney Philharmonia The Beatles Unplugged ensemble
Sydney Philharmonia Choirs in a Dawn Chorus concert[11]
Civic and community events
Sydney Philharmonia has taken part in many civic and community events such as the 1988 bicentennial celebrations and the opening ceremony of the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano as part of an international video link. Two years later, in 2000, it performed in both the opening concert Symphony at the Superdome[12][13] and the live, globally telecast opening ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics, singing the Australian national anthem and an excerpt from Hector Berlioz's Te Deum that accompanied the lighting and ascension of the Olympic flame.[14]
While Sydney Philharmonia has a long history of traditional classical-style choral concert presentation, it has in recent years gone considerably beyond this style in some of its concerts, with some notable success.
The choir provided backing chorus for Video Games Live in Sydney 2015.
The Beatles Unplugged was the title of an August 2012 concert which featured choral arrangements of Beatles songs with choreography and with costumes evoking the 1960s.[19][20]
Purcell's opera King Arthur was presented in 2010 in the City Recital Hall as if it were a 1940s radio play, with Foley artists and an on-stage voice-over artist announcing stage directions. The performers were costumed, but in a 1940s style. This concert was nominated for a Limelight Award.
The Dawn Chorus concert series in 2009 was a series of four free concerts scheduled for 5:30 am on summer Saturdays on Sydney beaches during the Sydney Festival. These performances attracted audiences of over 7000.[21][22]
James, William G. (William Garnet); Miller, David, (Performer.); Williamson, Malcolm, (Composer.); Edwards, Ross, (Composer.); Ford, Andrew, (Composer.); Boyd, Anne, (Composer.); Walker, Anthony, (Conductor.); Gyger, Elliott, (Composer.); Walker, Antony, (Conductor.); Sculthorpe, Peter, (Composer.); Whittington, Stephen, (Composer.); Gyger, Elliott. Ring out, wild bells; Williamson, Malcolm. This Christmas night; James, William Garnet. Carol of the birds; James, William Garnet. Three drovers; James, William Garnet. Christmas bush for His adorning; James, William Garnet. Silver stars are in the sky; James, William Garnet. Christmas Day; James, William Garnet. Day that Christ was born on; James, William Garnet. Christmas night; James, William Garnet. Noel-time; James, William Garnet. Sing gloria; James, William Garnet. Little town where Christ was born; James, William Garnet. Country carol; James, William Garnet. Merry Christmas; James, William Garnet. Our Lady of December; James, William Garnet. Christmas tree; James, William Garnet. Golden day; Ford, Andrew. Wassails and lullabies; Sculthorpe, Peter. Awake, glad heart; Boyd, Anne. Burning babe; Edwards, Ross. Haill! Quene of Heven; Whittington, Stephen. Puer natus in Bethlehem; Ford, Andrew. Coventry carol; Ford, Andrew. Corpus Christi carol; Edwards, Ross. Five carols from Quem Quaeritis; Ford, Andrew. This endris night; Edwards, Ross. Now the most high is borne; Edwards, Ross. Nowell in Bethlehem; Ford, Andrew. Susanni; Ford, Andrew. Song of the nuns of Chester; Ford, Andrew. Boar's head carol; Edwards, Ross. Lorde that lay in asse stalle; Ford, Andrew. Gloucestershire Wassail; Edwards, Ross. Fader of Hevene; Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir (1995). "An Australian Christmas" (CD). Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 446 975-2. Retrieved 29 November 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
Vine, Carl; Waart, Edo de. (Conductor); Harvey, Michael Kieran. (Performer); Vine, Carl, 1954–. Symphonies, no. 6; Vine, Carl, 1954–. Symphonies, no. 4.2; Vine, Carl, 1954–. Concertos; Sydney Symphony Orchestra; Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir (2000). "Choral symphony, Symphony no. 4.2 Piano concerto" (CD). Australian Broadcasting Corporation : Universal Music Group [distributor]. 456 698-2. Retrieved 29 November 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
Nathan, Isaac; Mackerras, Charles, 1925-2010; Weymark, Brett; Briger, Alex; Sydney Philharmonia Chamber Singers; Australian Broadcasting Corporation (2011). "Don John of Austria, Australia's first opera". ABC Classics. 4764114. Retrieved 30 November 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) A recording of performances on 18 and 20 October 2007 at the City Recital Hall Angel Place in Sydney.
First Night of the Proms: Symphony of a Thousand (2010)[30]
References
^"HURLSTONE CHORAL SOCIETY [sic]". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney, NSW. 23 February 1922. p. 12. The Hurlstone Park Choral Society ... gave a successful invitation concert
^"Hurlstone Park Choral Society". The Alert. Marrickville, NSW. 27 April 1923. Monday evening last
^Hindmarsh, Peter (2009). "quoir". Retrieved 9 May 2013.
^Olympic Arts Festival (19 August 2000). Symphony at the Superdome. Concert program. Sydney: Playbill Pty Ltd.
^McCallum, Peter (21 August 2000). "Mahler's dignity preserved in SuperDome arena". Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney.
^Games of the XXVII Olympiad opening ceremony (Program). Sydney: Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games (SOCOG). 15 September 2000. pp. 17, 52, 64, 74.
^Doctor Who Symphonic Spectacular. Concert program. Sydney: Sydney Opera House. 15 December 2012.