From Wikitia Type | 501(c)(3) Nonprofit |
|---|---|
| Genre | Sacred music, educational |
| Founded | Los Angeles, 1949 |
| Headquarters | Dallas, Texas , USA |
| Products |
|
| Website | choristersguild |
Choristers Guild is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization based in Dallas, Texas.[1] This ecumenical organization is a boutique publisher of choral, handbell, and instrumental music for churches, schools, and community ensembles, with customers mostly in the United States, but also around the world.[2][3] It publishes, prints, and ships sacred and school choral music, workbooks, and handbell and instrumental music from hundreds of composers, and is an active guild which provides educational resources for it members comprising of choral conductors, handbell ensembles, educators, community organizations, and church musicians.[4]
Choristers Guild’s mission statement is “Enabling Leaders to Nurture the Musical and Spiritual Growth of Children, Youth, and Adults” with the goal to develop the artistic, creative, and spiritual nature of people of all ages. The organization's events are held to inspire and empower musicians via in-person and online events for education and training. The signature program of the guild is the Choristers Guild Institute, a three-year training program for leaders of children and youth choirs, which began in 2009.[5]
Jann Aldredge-Clanton, composer
Anton Armstrong, conductor[6][7][8][9]
Lynn Shaw Bailey, composer[10]
Michael Bedford, composer[11]
Roberta Bitgood, composer
Mark Burrows, composer[12]
Kris Crunk, composer[13]
Taylor Davis, composer
Sandra J. Eithun, composer[14]
Laura Farnell, composer
Dan Forrest, composer
Carolyn Gillette, composer
Michael Helman, composer[15]
Hal Hopson, composer
Bill Ingram, composer[16]
Helen Kemp, composer[17]
Robert Leaf, composer [18]
Mary Lynn Lightfoot, composer
Jody W. Lindh, composer[19]
Austin C. Lovelace, composer[20]
Trevor Manor, composer[21]
Mark A. Miller, composer[22]
Cathy Moklebust, composer[23]
Anna Laura Page, composer[24]
Sue Ellen Page, composer[25]
Mark Patterson, composer[26]
Alice Parker, composer[27][28]
Allen Pote, composer[29]
Carl Schalk, composer
K. Lee Scott, composer[30]
Natalie Sleeth, composer[31]
Terry D. Taylor, composer[32]
André J. Thomas, composer[33]
Martha Lynn Thompson, composer[34]
Margaret R. Tucker, composer[35]
H. Dean Wagner, composer
Dale Wood (composer)[36]
Brian Wren, composer
Cynthia Wright, composer[37]
Terry W. York, composer[38]
Laurie Zelman, composer[39]
President: John Sutton[40][41]
Director: Tim Sharp
Immediate Past President: Stephanie McIlwain Miller[42]
President-Elect: Todd Arant
Secretary-Treasurer: Andy Masetti
Officers: Sandra Rosales, Ruth Szucs, and Elizabeth Shepley[43]
Executive Director: Dawn Jantsch
| Past Executive Directors | Years Served |
|---|---|
| Dawn Jantsch | 2017–present |
| Jim Rindelaub[42] | 2004–2017 |
| C. Michael Hawn (interim) | 2002–2003 |
| James Steel | 2000–2002 |
| George Eison | 1999 |
| Patty Evans | 1987–1998 |
| John T. Burke[44] | 1978–1986 |
| Cecil Lapo[45] | 1972–1978 |
| John S. C. Kemp | 1968–1972 |
| F. Lee Whittlesey | 1963–1967 |
| A. Leslie Jacobs | 1960–1963 |
| Ruth Krehbiel Jacobs, founder | 1949–1960 |
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Categories: [Music retailers of the United States] [Companies based in Dallas] [Retail companies established in 1949] [1949 establishments in California] [Book publishing companies based in Texas]