Little Singers of Paris

2018-05-22

Venue: National Centre for the Performing Arts - Concert Hall

Date: May 31, 2018

Programme

CLASSICAL MUSIC

Saint-Saens

Tollite Hostias (with piano)

Scarlatti

Laudate Dominum (with piano)

Buxtehude

Alléluia (with piano)

Bach

Jesus Bleibet Meine Freude (with piano)

Mozart

Alléluia (with piano)

Caccini

Ave Maria (with piano)

Duffaure

Stabat Mater (with piano)

Sermisy

Tant Que Vivrai (A Cappela)

Saint-Preux

Concerto Pour une Voix (A Cappela)

Passereau

Il est bel et Bon (A Cappela)

Mozart

Berceuse (A Cappela)

Steurlein

J’entends une Chanson (A Cappela)

——Intermission——

WORLD MUSIC

French Song

Mediterrannée

Spanish Song

Hay Linda Amiga

Swedish Song

Vem Kan Segla Forutan Vind

Canadian Song

A la Claire Fontaine

US Song

Go Tell It on the Mountain

Martinique Song

A la Claire Fontaine Créole

Reunion

P’tite Fleur Fanée

Venezuelan Song

Alma Llanera

Mexican Song

Cielito Lindo

North Korean Song

Onara

Philippines Song

Bahay Kubo

Japanese Song

Sakura

Chinese Song

Dili Dili

Presenter

The Little Singers of Paris

In the summer of 1906, two young students, Pierre Martin and Paul Berthier (Father of the composer Jacques Berthier and grandfather of France Gall), were on vacation in the abbey of Tamié in Savoy. They came up a “dream” which plans to start a ma?trise (choir school) for child choristers that would travel from church to church, town to town, to carry the living testimony of the authentic tradition of religious music.

Their dream came true in the next year. Despite the lack of money, their enthusiasm brought them to settle in an old dwelling in Paris suburb and they started to receive their first scholar.

This was the birth of Les Petits Chanteurs à la Croix de Bois (The Little Singers of Paris). The first rehearsal took place on January 10th, 1907 and the first concert was held in the Parish Church of the Kings of France, St-Germain l’Auxerrois in October in the same year. It was well-received by music lovers in Paris. Les Petits Chanteurs à la Croix de Bois were soon become popular throughout France. In contrast to the music style in vogue at the time, the quality of the choir’s singing and the purity of the young voices aroused astonishment and enthusiasm in the audience.

The choristers were dressed in white albs and had a little wooden cross round their necks, which instilled a sobriety and were regarded as signs of the music revival. The legend of this choir school commenced.

Though the choir school was suffered from the ordeal of the First World War in 1914-1918, it did not hinder their faith. The school went on more determined than ever, once the war was over. In 1924, Abbé Maillet was appointed as the school's director. A young priest with outstanding stature and full of faith, he immediately stamped his personal imprint in the life of Les Petits Chanteurs. Before that, the choir's repertoire was exclusively religious works of the Gregorian and polyphonic music of the 15th and 16th centuries. He refreshed Les Petits Chanteurs by bringing a repertoire of popular songs in French or from foreign countries and other works by leading composers in time. Through expanding its repertoire, the Choir had reached a broader audience.

Abbé Maillet also brought Les Petits Chanteurs out of France, initially to neighboring countries, and then, in 1931, with an audacity unheard of in those days, to North America. Les Petits Chanteurs received a triumphant welcome in the United States and Canada. It was the beginning of the international and worldwide delegation covering today a total of 80 countries and four rounds of the world tours. The little choristers who take part in these trips have received only a period of training and preparation in school. Teachers who accompany the students teach them from time to time in the trip for a well-practiced routine and it requires the students a certain degree of discipline.

The "Little Singers" will leave the choir when they reach 15 years old and continue their education in secondary school. These "Little Singers" may have moments of nostalgia in the beginning of their new school life but with their wealth of experience and exceptional spirit of anticipation, they are open to face the future. Today as at the beginning, Les Petits Chanteurs are managed by collegial leadership, they continue their role of Little Singers of Peace, with Hugo Gutierrez as the Music Director.

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