Tapiola Choir Tapiolan kuoro, Tapiolakören | |
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Origin | Espoo, Finland |
Genres | Children's choir |
Years active | 1963–present |
Spinoffs | Tapiola Chamber Choir |
The Tapiola Choir (Finnish: Tapiolan kuoro, Swedish: Tapiolakören,[1] originally Tapiolan Yhteiskoulun kuoro[2]) is a children's choir from Espoo, Finland. The choir was founded in 1963 by Erkki Pohjola. Pohjola led the choir from its formation until 1994 and cultivated a pedagogical style based on the teachings of Zoltan Kodály and Carl Orff.[2] During Pohjola's tenure as artistic director the choir undertook some fifty tours of the USA, Japan and the USSR among other countries.[3] In 1994 the director's post was taken over by Kari Ala-Pöllänen and in 2008 by Pasi Hyökki.[1]
The choir has enjoyed international acclaim and has become associated with the concept of the "Tapiola Sound" which critics have used to describe its uniquely clear and natural sound.[2] In 1971 the Tapiola Choir won the BBC Let the People Sing contest with a programme that included the piece Aglepta by Arne Mellnäs which was considered too difficult to perform by some Scandinavian choirs.[4] The choir was awarded the UNESCO Prize for the Promotion of the Arts in 1996 and the Youth Choir of the Year award by the Finnish Broadcasting Company in 2005.[3] In 2017 the Ministry of Education and Culture of Finland awarded the Tapiola Choir with the Lapsenpäivä prize for excellence in art education.[5]
In 1984 former members of the choir founded the Tapiola Chamber Choir. In 2020 the choir established the Kari Ala-Pöllänen prize to be awarded biennially to accomplished and inspiring Finnish school choir directors.[6]