— Main Menu —
T
he “
G
olden
H
its
O
f
T
he
50s”
Main Menu
Concept Refinement
The Author..Wayne Jancik
Golden Age Of The 50s
Golden Age Of The 60s
1970s and There After
PLACE_LINK_HERE?wmode=transparent” width=”400″ height=”400″ >
MORMON TABERNACLE CHOIR
“BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC
“
(Julia Ward Howe, William Steffe)
Columbia 41459
No. 13 October 26. 1959
;
;.
The Mormons have often been nicknamed “The Singing Saints,” and vocal rejoicing has been a part
of their religious practice since the formation of the Church of the Latter Day Saints by Joseph Smith
in 1830. The forerunner of the Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir, as it is officially known, was
established on August 22, 1847, less than two weeks after Brigham Young and his hardy followers
began setting up their base in Utah’s Valley of the Great Salt Lake.
;
Two years later, John Perry became the choir’s regular director. Richard P. Condie (b. 1898,
Springville, UT; d. Dec. 22, 1985), a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music of Music
and a young tenor in many traveling opera company productions, worked as the assistant conductor
of the choir for 20 years before becoming the choir’s 11th conductor in 1957, at the age of 59. The
group had toured and recorded on numerous occasions: for one recording session, in 1910, the
Columbia Phonograph Company used two mammoth horns, coupled directly to the recording needle
and wax disk, to capture the rejoicing.
l
Condie had certain ideas about just how the choir should sound. He had grown up listening to
Italian immigrants singing romantic old songs and wanted a sound like that for the choir. Many
have since credited Condie with creating the “Tabernacle Choir sound.”
.
In 1958, Condie and his 300-plus voices, with the frill support of Eugene Ormandy and the
Philadelphia Orchestra, recorded one of the most memorable–and one of the strangest entries
on the charts, the “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” ‘ Their rendition of this “oldie” from 1862
earned them a Grammy as “Bcst Performance by a Vocal Group.”
;
The Mormon Tabernade Choir has appeared on many TV programs, including “The Ed Sullivan
Show”; an intercontinental satellite btoadcast from Mt. Rushmore (1962); and NBC’s coverage
of the Statue of Liberty Centonnial. More than 150 albums have been issued, and four of them–
The Lord’s Prayer
(1959),
The Spirit of Christmas
( 1959),
Songs of
the North & South 1861-1865
(1961), and
Tht Lord’s
Prayer Volume II
(1963)–made
Billboard’s
top pop albums chart.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik