Core Children's Choir Repertoire
  • Hasn't been a children's choir post in a while, so:

    Recommend your top 5 children's choir rep suggestions, beyond the propers, once they learn the Mass Ordinary and the 4 seasonal Marian anthems. Accompanied or acapella, easy to moderate, and unison. What would you teach first to a newly commissioned children's choir?
  • Have you checked into the RSCM?
    They should have something for your needs.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • tomjaw
    Posts: 2,797
    Our children's choir sang the Kyrie of the Byrd 3 part yesterday (With help from a couple of adults and some older teenagers.)

    First the Marian anthems
    Secondly the Ordinary, Asperges, Mass I, IX, XI, and XVII and Credo I

    Our children's choir are singing the psalm verses for the Introit, they seem to work. For the easier Introits they are also singing the chant.

    Office Hymns are another option,
    O Salutaris (sung to the Office melody of the day / season)
    Jesu Dulcis Memoria with extra verses taken from the Matins and Lauds Hymn.

    Or chants with a chorus
    Veni veni Emmanuel
    Puer Natus in Bethlehem
    Rorate Caeli de super
    Attende Domine
    O filli et filliae
    Thanked by 1M. Jackson Osborn
  • smt
    Posts: 71
    For Byrd 3: You let them sing just the cantus and men are singing T+B or do you transpose the piece?
  • tomjaw
    Posts: 2,797
    Will ask, I don't run the children's choir.
  • The Liber Cantualis contains much that children can learn.
    Thanked by 2CHGiffen tomjaw
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 2,434
    To tomjaw’s suggestions, I think that Salve, mater misericordiae is kind of obligatory in trad land especially. It is not my favorite, but it is handy. Salve, festa dies is one of my favorites but is, on the other hand, used once a year and is tricky.

    Anyway, the simple repeated chants like Parce, Domine and the Cor Jesu sacratissimum seem necessary especially if you have the kids sing at Benediction; the Adoremus in aeternum (the mode V from the Solesmes/Vatican editions is nice; we switch to one in mode VI, which I am fairly sure is from the Westminster Hymnal in Advent and in Lent) is also nice. And then you have the O Salutaris and Tantum; around here, we are lucky that there is adoration almost every day from Tuesday through Saturday and even on Sunday when the university is in session. Most of those places use a metrical tune for the O Salutaris but then use the mode III Tantum (this has some issues; people come in randomly and often lob off the first note of the first podatus of “veneremur”, but it’s still a good problem to have).

    I guess that’s more than five, but I know of a parish where they do benediction monthly after Mass. It’s not my thing to do it that way, but it’d be a place where you could regularly have the children leading the singing instead of adults. And that would be three to four pieces since in the trad world, you do an exposition chant (not necessarily O Salutaris! Could be Ave verum, Rorate caeli in Advent), a Marian chant (the seasonal antiphon etc., Inviolata, the Recordare offertory, the first form of the Litany in the Liber, the Sub Tim all being frequently used choices), something for the pope (Tu es Petrus from the office of Saints Peter and Paul is common), maybe the bishop (Oremus pro antistite for example), and then the Tantum plus a reposition chant. Lots of these are as MJO says in the Liber Cantualis. My requirement is typically that it be in a Solesmes edition, and my preference is that it be accompanied, so if Potiron or someone else wrote one, great. If not, I have to improvise. (There are a lot of O Salutaris and Tantum melodies in Cantus Selecti, some of which are just not that great, with all due respect given to Dom Pothier and to his successors.)

    And thinking further: maybe you teach the kids the Tantum, but not the corresponding O Salutaris. It’s generally got a harder melody!
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • davido
    Posts: 973
    Jesu, Joy of man’s desiring works great as a unison kids anthem.
    All the earth sing forth (Bach/ed. Hopson) is a nice unison anthem.
    Ave verum of Mozart or Elgar.
    Te Deum by Michael Bedford.
    Anything from ‘Praise and Thanksgiving: A Choral Cycle’ by Colin Mawby.
    Thanked by 1StimsonInRehab
  • Benton
    Posts: 4
    After the Mass Ordinary (and perhaps Marian antiphons), I teach rounds: Jubilate Deo (Praetorius), Alleluia (Boyce), maybe Dona Nobis Pacem. I also do the Dubois Adoramus te, Christe. Great for working on solfege down from high Do.