Become a Member

Training Choir 2019

Training Choir is a group of unchanged voices (2nd grade and up) who are eager to start or continue their singing journey. Sign up here, and we will contact you about joining our training choir.

Concert Choir Website Photo.jpeg

Concert Choir consists of both changed and unchanged voices (usually 5th through 12th grades) who show an excellent sense of pitch and vocal control. We are currently holding placements. Fill out our placement form, and we will contact you to set up a time.

BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP

CHANGING THE LIVES OF MISSISSIPPI BOYS…

Membership in the Mississippi Boychoir is about changing lives through character development, friendship, and fun. It’s about learning new skills, listening to lots of different kinds of music, and singing… a lot of singing!

TRAINING IN LEADERSHIP, TEAMWORK, AND SOCIAL SKILLS…

Members of the choir get training in leadership, teamwork, and social skills.  The valuable training continues to reward the boys as they become adult community leaders and contributors.  Boychoir emphasizes self-discipline, responsibility, and respect for self and others.

SUPERIOR MUSIC TRAINING AND TRAVEL…

Boychoir members receive superior musical training in fundamentals of vocal technique, rhythm, sight reading and tone quality.  They attend weekly rehearsals as well as two intensive music camps each season.

HIGHER GRADES AND COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIPS…

A wealth of research has proven the outcomes of studying music – higher academic grades and college scholarships.  According to the Children’s Music Workshop, some benefits of music education include:

  • Music training helps the brain develop in the areas involved in language and learning

  • Link between music and spatial intelligence

  • Students of the arts become creative thinkers

  • Students of the arts do better on standardized tests

  • Exposure to other cultures, languages, and customs teaches empathy

  • Students of music learn craftsmanship

  • Music provides a means of self-expression

  • Performing music teaches children to conquer their fears and successfully take risks.

FUN, FRIENDSHIP, AND TRAVEL!

More immediately, the payoff is translated into fun for the boys who need an outlet for their talents, who need friends with similar interests and whose abilities need to be recognized.  Boys and their chaperones travel across Mississippi and the USA (and sometimes internationally!) to concerts and choir festivals, singing an average of 15 songs each performance.

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

Aaron Conley went on to Broadway where he played the part of Young Simba in Disney’s The Lion King.

Seth Womack graduated out of the Mississippi Boychoir with a full scholarship for his first three years of college and a half scholarship for his last two years. He is currently Vice President of of the Mississippi Boychoir Board of Directors.

James Simmons left the Mississippi Boychoir to attend the American Boychoir School in Princeton, NJ.

Charter member Mark Edwards was in Boychoir for 6 years (two years as Head Choirboy) and loves and lives his music and never misses an opportunity to sing or play his trumpet at his church. He is currently the band director at Brandon High School.

Matt Cooksey, who traveled to festivals in Minnesota and England and sang in a Regional Honor Choir, moved to another state and was soon chosen as the only soprano soloist in an honor choir. He got his undergraduate degree at Indiana University and his masters degrees at Florida State University. He is currently the Director of Artistic Operations for Florida Grand Opera.

Tamarceo Shaw was selected from 450 singers as the only soprano soloist in the final concert of the 2005 World Festival of Singing for Men and Boys and seems to get standing ovations every time audiences hear his unusually distinctive voice. He is working on his doctoral degree at Auburn University.

Nicholas Pace attended Mississippi School for the Arts. He got his undergraduate from Mississippi State University, a masters at Mississippi College, and his D.O. at William Carey University. He is now a flight surgeon for the US Air Force