European Grand Prix for Choral Singing

Summary

The European Grand Prix for Choral Singing (in French, Grand Prix Européen de Chant Choral, commonly abbreviated as European Choral Grand Prix or EGP) is an annual choral competition between the winners of six European choral competitions. It was inaugurated in 1989.

Despite its name, the EGP is not limited to European choirs; this is because choirs from any country can join the choral competitions in any of the EGP’s member-cities. As of 1995, one choir from Japan, one choir from Argentina, two choirs from Indonesia, and two choirs from the United States have won the EGP, while two choirs from the Philippines and United States have won the EGP twice. In addition, the contest is not limited to adult choirs; three of the grand prize-winning choirs are children's choirs.

As of 2022, four choirs had won the EGP twice: the University of the Philippines Madrigal Singers[1][2] (1997 and 2007), APZ Tone Tomšič (2002 and 2008), University of Utah Chamber Choir (renamed from the University of Utah Singers) (2006 and 2015), and Vesna Children's Choir (2000 and 2017).

The 30th European Grand Prix for Choral Singing taking place in Maribor, Slovenia, on April 21, 2018 had the first win from an indonesian choir. The Resonanz Children’s Choir (TRCC), led by conductor Avip Priatna, has won an award at the EGP 2018.[3]

In the summer of 2019, Youth choir "Kamēr..." became the 1st and currently the only choir having won the EGP three times (2004, 2013, and 2019).

As of 2022, two conductors have won the EGP twice: Stojan Kuret (2002 and 2010) and Avip Priatna (2018 and 2022).

Organizing committee and member cities edit

The EGP is organized by the organizing committees of the following choral competitions, from which the EGP contenders are selected:

  1. Concorso Polifónico Guido d'Arezzo (International Guido d'Arezzo Polyphonic Contest) - Arezzo, Province of Arezzo, Italy
  2. Béla Bartók International Choir Competition - Debrecen, Hajdú-Bihar county, Hungary
  3. International Choral Competition Gallus Maribor - Maribor, Slovenia
  4. Certamen Coral de Tolosa (Tolosa Choral Competition) - Tolosa, Basque Country, Spain
  5. Florilège Vocal de Tours (Tours Vocal Competition) - Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France
  6. International May Choir Competition «Prof. G. Dimitrov» - Varna, Varna Province, Bulgaria

Each individual contest is usually referred to by the name of its host city instead of the competition's official title. The grand prize winners of each contest are automatically eligible to compete at the EGP.

The hosting of each annual EGP competition is rotated among the six member cities.

History edit

The European Grand Prix for Choral Singing was created in 1988 through the initiative of the competitions of AREZZO (Italy), DEBRECEN (Hungary), GORIZIA (Italy) and TOURS (France) Two others have also been associated: VARNA (Bulgaria) in 1989, and TOLOSA (Basque Country/Spain) in 1990. In 2008 Gorizia stepped out of the Association and MARIBOR (Slovenia) joined it.

Regulations edit

Eligibility edit

As mentioned earlier, the contest is open only to the grand prize winners of the six-member European choral competitions in the previous year. In other words, if a choir wins the grand prize in any of the six cities' choral contests, it is eligible for then next year's EGP. Consequently, this also means that, unlike other choral competitions, the EGP does not solicit participants to the contest; no choir may directly apply or audition in order to join the EGP. If an eligible choir backs out, a substitute choir may take its place; as a penalty, any choir that backs out will not be eligible to compete in any of the six qualifying contests for the next year.

No choir may win the grand prize in more than one qualifying competition in a single year. For example, if a choir is named the grand prize winner in Arezzo, it is automatically disqualified to compete in the contests in the five remaining cities for the rest of the year.

There are no specific regulations prohibiting a former finalist (or even a former laureate) from competing in (or even winning again) the EGP more than once. The Philippine Madrigal Singers (laureate of the 1997 EGP) have won the 2006 Florilège Vocal de Tours,[4] going on to win the Grand Prize in 2007 in Arezzo, Italy. In the same competition, the Madrigal Singers competed with the Vesna Children's Choir (laureate of the 2000 EGP), who won the grand prize of the 2006 Tolosa competition.[5]

Repertoire and choir membership edit

Each competing choir is required to sing in the same group/category as they performed in respective competitions. Choirs are encouraged to perform songs from various eras and composers. Songs with accompaniment (by any instrument) are allowed as long as the total length of accompanied songs does not exceed ten (10) minutes. The host city determines the total maximum performance time allowed to each finalist.

Each competing choir is also required to have the same number of singers it had from the qualifying competition, plus or minus ten percent (10%) of that number. The total number of singers per choir may be a minimum of 12 singers and a maximum of 60 singers regardless of the number of voice sections or groups; this is because the eligibility requirements vary for each of the six qualifying competitions. Because of this, it is possible for mixed-voice choirs to compete directly against all-male and all-female choirs; it is also possible for children's choirs to compete against adult choirs (and even win, as in 2000, 2001, 2017, and 2018).

The grand prize winner edit

The EGP grand prize winner, or laureate, is awarded a diploma, a trophy and additional prizes to be determined by the host city, including a cash prize of up to 4,000 Euros (usually awarded).

The EGP winner is not allowed to compete in any international choral competition, member of the European Grand Prix Association, for two years.

Laureates edit

The following are the lists of grand prize winners for the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing.[6][7][8]

Laureates per year edit

Laureates of the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing per year
Year Edition Host Choir Director/Conductor City of Origin Country of Origin
1989 1   Arezzo Kammerkoret Hymnia Poul Emborg and Fleming Windekilde Copenhagen   Denmark
1990 2   Debrecen (postponed) NA NA NA
1991 3   Tours Chamber Choir of the Conservatoire Tadas Šumskas Vilnius   Lithuania
1992 4   Gorizia St Jacobs Kammarkör Gary Graden Stockholm   Sweden
1993 5   Varna Jauna Musica Vaclovas Augustinas and Romas Skapas Vilnius   Lithuania
1994 6   Tolosa The Mats Nilsson Vocal Ensemble Mats Nilsson Stockholm   Sweden
1995 7   Arezzo Kallos Choir Fumiaki Kuriyama Tokyo   Japan
1996 8   Debrecen Pro Musica Leánykar Dénes Szabó Nyíregyháza   Hungary
1997 9   Tours University of the Philippines Madrigal Singers Andrea Veneracion Quezon City   Philippines
1998 10   Gorizia University of Mississippi Concert Singers Archived 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine Jerry Jordan Oxford, MS   United States
1999 11   Varna Lunds Vocal Ensemble Ingemar Månsson Lund   Sweden
2000 12   Tolosa Vesna Children Choir[a] Alexander Ponomariov Moscow   Russia
2001 13   Debrecen Magnificat Children's and Youth Choir Valéria Szebellédi Budapest   Hungary
2002 14   Arezzo A.P.Z. Tone Tomsic Stojan Kuret Ljubljana   Slovenia
2003 15   Tours Kamerinis choras Brevis Gintautas Venislovas Vilnius   Lithuania
2004 16   Gorizia Youth Choir "Kamer..." Māris Sirmais Riga   Latvia
2005 17   Varna Allmänna Sången Cecilia Rydinger Alin Uppsala   Sweden
2006 18   Tolosa University of Utah Singers Brady Allred Salt Lake City   United States
2007 19   Arezzo University of the Philippines Madrigal Singers Mark Anthony Carpio Quezon City   Philippines
2008 20   Debrecen A.P.Z. Tone Tomsic Urša Lah Ljubljana   Slovenia
2009 21   Tours Coro Universitario de Mendoza Silvana Vallesi Mendoza   Argentina
2010 22   Varna Vokalna akademija Ljubljana Stojan Kuret Ljubljana   Slovenia
2011 23   Tolosa The Swedish Chamber Choir Simon Phipps Gothenburg   Sweden
2012 24   Maribor Sofia Vokalensemble Bengt Ollén Stockholm   Sweden
2013 25   Arezzo Youth Choir "Kamer..." Jānis Liepiņš Riga   Latvia
2014 26   Debrecen S:t Jacobs Ungdomskör Mikael Wedar Stockholm   Sweden
2015 27   Tours University of Utah Chamber Choir Archived 2015-06-08 at the Wayback Machine[b] Barlow Bradford Salt Lake City   United States
2016 28   Varna UT Insieme Vocale Consonante Lorenzo Donati Santa Firmina   Italy
2017 29   Tolosa Vesna Children Choir[c] Nadezhda Averina Moscow   Russia
2018 30   Maribor The Resonanz Children Choir Avip Priatna Jakarta   Indonesia
2019 31   Arezzo Youth Choir "Kamer..." Aivis Greters Riga   Latvia
2020 32   Debrecen (postponed) NA NA NA
2021 (not held) (not held) NA NA NA NA
2022 33   Tours Batavia Madrigal Singers Avip Priatna Jakarta   Indonesia
2023 34   Debrecen Chamber Choir Sophia Olexii Shamrytskyi Kyiv   Ukraine
Total 32 laureates (none in 1990,2021)

Laureates per country edit

Laureates of the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing per country
Country Laureates Notes
  Sweden 7 wins Four choirs from Stockholm
  Lithuania 3 wins All from Vilnius
  Slovenia 3 wins All from Ljubljana; APZ Tone Tomšič winning twice
  United States 3 wins University of Utah Chamber Choir (renamed from University of Utah Singers) winning twice
  Latvia 3 wins Jauniesu koris "Kamer..." winning thrice – 1st choir to win three times
  Russia 2 wins Vesna Children's Choir winning twice
  Hungary 2 wins
  Philippines 2 wins Philippine Madrigal Singers winning twice - 1st choir to win twice
  Indonesia 2 wins All from Jakarta
  Argentina 1 win
  Denmark 1 win
  Japan 1 win
  Italy 1 win
  Ukraine 1 win
Total 32 wins

Laureates per continent edit

Laureates of the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing per continent
Continent Laureates
Europe 23 wins
Asia 5 wins
North America 3 wins
South America 1 win
Total 32 wins

References edit

  1. ^ [1] Archived 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine List of winners at the 2007 Arezzo competition, including the GPE
  2. ^ [2] Archived 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine "Madrigal Singers win European Grand Prix for the second time". The Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 27, 2007.
  3. ^ "EGP Winners 1989 – present". egpchoral.com. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  4. ^ [3] Archived 2006-10-13 at the Wayback Machine List of winners at the 2006 Florilege de Tours, from the official Florilege website.
  5. ^ [4] Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine. News article in Spanish
  6. ^ [5] Archived 2007-03-13 at the Wayback Machine List of GPE Winners, from Florilege Vocal de Tours official website.
  7. ^ [6] Archived 2006-05-09 at the Wayback Machine List of GPE Winners, from GPE official website.
  8. ^ [7] Archived 2011-09-05 at the Wayback Machine List of GPE Winners, from Concurso Tolosa official website.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Link to Classical archives; not an official web site for the Vesna Children Choir
  2. ^ Renamed from the University of Utah Singers
  3. ^ Link to Classical archives; not an official web site for the Vesna Children Choir

External links edit

European Grand Prix for Choral Singing - GPE Official home page

  • Official web sites for each member-city:
    • Arezzo
    • Debrecen
    • Maribor
    • Tolosa
    • Tours
    • Varna