The Choirboys (boyband)

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The Choirboys
Genres Choral, classic
Years active 2005–2007
Labels Universal
Website Official website
Members William Dutton
Bill Goss
Andrew Swait
Past members Patrick Aspbury
Ben Inman
CJ Porter-Thaw

The Choirboys is an English boy band, made up of cathedral choristers. In 2005, a talent search was held to find a young chorister to bring choral music into the current music scene. However, the judges could not decide which of the three finalists should be given the recording contract and decided to assemble them as a trio.

Original members (2005)

The original line-up of the group was made of Patrick Aspbury (born 9 June 1993, Chelmsford), Eskricke Francis Benedict "Ben" Inman (born 19 March 1993, Starbeck, Harrogate, North Yorkshire) and Charles John "CJ" Porter-Thaw (born 11 December 1994, Sheffield). Both Aspbury and Porter-Thaw were members of Ely Cathedral choir and Inman was a member of the choir of Southwell Minster.

In the summer of 2005, they were selected from cathedral choristers around the UK for a recording contract with Universal Classics and Jazz, and released their self-titled first album in November of that year.

After an intensive promotional tour of television and radio stations, they performed at several events, including the Southwell Minster St. Cecilia Concert, the Ely Cathedral May Day Concert and charity concerts in London venues such as the Royal Albert Hall.[citation needed]

The first trio has since moved on and retired from singing as trebles at their respective cathedrals.

Inman recorded as a solo artist on the James Newton-Howard soundtrack for the 2005 film, King Kong, and has since retired as a treble chorister from Southwell Minster. He won the Trebby Award for 'Best Solo Treble Track' in 2006 for "Fairest Isle".[1]

New members (2007)

As the Choirboys matured, so did their voices, and to keep the sound of the group the same a new trio replaced Porter-Thaw, Aspbury and Inman. The new group was made up of Andrew Swait (2 October 1994) of Cheltenham College Gloucestershire, Bill Goss (11 December 1994) and Will Dutton (17 November 1995) who is the son of Paul Dutton. Swait was a member of Tewkesbury Abbey choir, Dutton was a member of St. Mark's Church in Harrogate and Goss was a pupil at St. Peter's School, York.[citation needed]

Swait features with other singers in many other albums. He features on Landscape and Time by the King's Singers, he sang with countertenor James Bowman in 2008 on Songs of Innocence with pianist Andrew Plant. He has sung with Anna Netrebko on her Souvenirs in 2008 and recorded on the NMC Recordings label on a celebratory disc of New Music released in 2009; here he premiered works by James MacMillan (with fellow treble Sam Harris, and harpist Lucy Wakeford) and Peter Maxwell Davies, again with Andrew Plant. Herald Records released his final treble solo album in 2009, Salve Puerule where he was accompanied by the Trinity College of Music Chamber Choir. Swait also appeared in the children's documentary A Different Life, which depicted his life as a chorister.[2]

Dutton was awarded the BBC Radio 2 'Young Chorister of the Year' Award in 2006,[3] and was also once a member of the National Children's Orchestra of Great Britain, where he was co-principal violinist.[citation needed]

Goss had taken part in the Music For Youth Festival in Birmingham Symphony Hall and twice taken first prize as well as an 'outstanding' award. He sang the role of Miles in Benjamin Britten's The Turn of the Screw with Opera Royal de Wallonie in Liege, Belgium, as well as numerous productions with Opera North including Verdi's Macbeth and Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream. In 2007 Goss was awarded two music scholarships to attend St. Peter's School, York.

Discography

Albums

The Choirboys

Their self-titled debut album was released 28 November 2005 and sold 100,000 copies in the first week, making it the fastest-selling classical debut album in the UK and earning The Choirboys a gold disc which was presented to them on the popular BBC children's television programme, Blue Peter.[citation needed] It has since gone 2x platinum and has to date sold over 750,000 .copies.[4] It peaked at #25 in the UK Albums Chart.[5]

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Ecce Homo" (Theme from Mr. Bean) Howard Goodall 2:00
2. "Tears in Heaven"   Eric Clapton, Will Jennings 4:06
3. "Panis Angelicus"   César Franck 3:47
4. "Do You Hear What I Hear?" (featuring Hayley Westenra) Noël Regney, Gloria Shayne Baker 2:53
5. "Walking in the Air" (Theme from The Snowman) Howard Blake 3:24
6. "In paradisum"   Gabriel Fauré 3:06
7. "The Lord Bless You and Keep You"   John Rutter 2:40
8. "Pie Jesu"   Thomas of Celano 3:34
9. "Danny Boy"   Frederick Weatherly 4:12
10. "The Lord is My Shepherd" (Theme from The Vicar of Dibley) Howard Goodall 3:01
11. "He's Not Heavy, He's My Brother"   Bobby Scott, Bob Russell 3:44
12. "Corpus Christi Carol" (From A Boy was Born) Benjamin Britten 2:35
13. "O for the Wings of a Dove"   Felix Mendelssohn 5:10
14. "Agnus Dei"   Traditional 1:26
15. "Let There Be Peace on Earth"   Jill Jackson Miller, Sy Miller 1:55
16. "Miserere"   Gregorio Allegri 11:51

The Carols Album

A second album The Carols Album was released on 3 December 2007 in the UK. By this time the singing voices of the original Choirboys had changed and their members had changed to reflect this. The new line-up is Andrew Swait, William Dutton and Bill Goss.

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "O Holy Night" (Featuring All Angels) Adolphe Adam 4:29
2. "O Little Town of Bethlehem"   Phillips Brooks, Ralph Vaughan Williams 3:30
3. "Ding Dong Merrily on High"   Jehan Tabourot, George Ratcliffe Woodward, Charles Wood 2:08
4. "What Sweeter Music"   John Rutter 3:06
5. "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas"   Hugh Martin, Ralph Blane 3:27
6. "Silent Night"   Joseph Mohr, Franz Xaver Gruber, John Freeman Young 2:19
7. "In the Bleak Midwinter"   Christina Rossetti, Gustav Holst 4:29
8. "Coventry Carol"   Traditional 3:36
9. "Away in a Manger"   Martin Luther 2:01
10. "Once in Royal David's City"   Cecil Frances Alexander, Henry John Gauntlett 3:07
11. "In Dulci Jubilo"   Heinrich Seuse, Robert Lucas de Pearsall, John Mason Neale 1:48
12. "O Come, All Ye Faithful"   John Francis Wade, Frederick Oakeley 2:46
13. "The Holly and the Ivy"   Traditional 3:31
14. "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing"   Felix Mendelssohn, John Wesley, George Whitefield 3:04

Singles

References

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External links