Akademiska Sångföreningen Explained

The Academic Male Voice Choir of Helsinki
Swedish: Akademiska Sångföreningen
Origin:Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland,
Members:Ca 60 active
Chief Conductor:Elisa Huovinen
Choir Admission:Semiannual auditions

The Academic Male Voice Choir of Helsinki (Swedish: '''Akademiska Sångföreningen'''|lit=The Academic Song Association, pronounced as /sv-FI/), abbreviated AS, colloquially also known as Swedish: '''Akademen''' (pronounced as /sv-FI/), is a Finland-Swedish academic male-voice choir in Helsinki, Finland. The choir was founded in 1838 by Fredrik Pacius and is the oldest extant choir in Finland. It is one of two male-voice choirs affiliated with the University of Helsinki, the other being the oldest extant Finnish-language choir, the YL Male Voice Choir (Finnish: Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat). Furthermore, it is one of two Swedish-language choirs affiliated with the University of Helsinki, the other being the Academic Female Voice Choir Lyran (Swedish: Akademiska Damkören Lyran).

History

Overview

Akademiska Sångföreningen was founded no later than during the spring term of 1838 by Fredrik Pacius, music lecturer at the Imperial Alexander University of Finland (today the University of Helsinki) and sometimes known as "the father of Finnish music", originally under the name Swedish: Akademiska Sångsällskapet{{efn|Originally spelt {{lang|sv|Akademiska Sång-Sälskapet. The choir is thus the oldest extant one in Finland. The name Swedish: Akademiska Sångföreningen was introduced no later than in 1846.

During the 19th century the choir became a symbol of national awakening in the emerging Finnish nation, at the time part of the Russian Empire as the Grand Duchy of Finland. On 13 May 1848, Pacius' composition Swedish: [[Maamme|Vårt land]]|lit=Our Land|label=none, set to the poem by Johan Ludvig Runeberg, was performed for the first time by the choir, conducted by Pacius, during the students' celebration of the Flora Day. The composition was to become the national anthem of the Finnish nation.

In the 1850s and 60s, elite triple quartets from within the choir's ranks (Swedish: "sångartolfvor"|lit=singer twelves) participated in raising the funds necessary to build what is today known as the Old Student House in Helsinki (Swedish: Gamla studenthuset, Finnish: Vanha ylioppilastalo), by travelling the country performing. The Old Student House was finished in 1870 and is still the location for the choir's weekly rehearsals.

During the second half of the 20th century, the choir, directed by modernist Erik Bergman, came to carve out new paths for the male-voice choir tradition in Finland, proving that this genre of music was able to exhibit superior musical qualities as well. After Bergman, jazz musician Henrik Otto Donner carried on this tradition.

At end of the 1970s and the beginning of the 80s the choir was engaged in lighter types of music. The Swedish: Akademen à la carte concerts in Finlandia Hall were decidedly successful and, when necessary, members of the choir would compose pieces of music themselves.

During the 20th century the choir had several prominent conductors: Bengt Carlson, Nils-Eric Fougstedt, Erik Bergman, Henrik Otto Donner, Markus Westerlund, Eric-Olof Söderström, Tom Eklundh, John Schultz and Henrik Wikström all directed the choir. The most recent chief conductor Dr Kari Turunen, Doctor of Music, was appointed 2008 and stepped down in 2019 after the spring term, having been appointed artistic director of the Vancouver Chamber Choir, beginning the autumn term 2019. In June 2019, Elisa Huovinen, Master of Music, was appointed his successor as chief conductor of Akademiska Sångföreningen.

List of chief conductors

The chief conductor is the artistic director of the choir.

Chief conductors
From (semester)To (semester) incl.Consecutive tenureTotal tenureNameNotes
data-sort-value="8.5" yrs data-sort-value="8.5" yrs Founder
4 yrs 4 yrs
Temporary conductors from the autumn semester of 1850 to the spring semester of 1857
3 yrs 3 yrs
4 yrs 4 yrs
1 yr 1 yr
1 yr 1 yr Appointed Honorary Member in 1920
2 yrs 3 yrs
data-sort-value="1.5" yrs data-sort-value="1.5" yrs
data-sort-value="1.5" yrs data-sort-value="4.5" yrs
1 yr 3 yrs
1 yr 1 yr
3 yrs data-sort-value="4.5" yrs
3 yrs data-sort-value="6.5" yrs Appointed Honorary Member in 1915
2 yr 2 yr
2 yr 2 yr
2 yr 2 yr
1 yr 1 yr
2 yr 2 yr
Interregnum from the autumn semester of 1882 to the spring semester of 1884
2 yr 2 yr
8 yrs data-sort-value="11.5" yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 1900, Honorary Member in 1910
data-sort-value="1.5" yrs data-sort-value="2.5" yrs
2 yr data-sort-value="11.5" yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 1900, Honorary Member in 1910
1 yr 1 yr
data-sort-value="3.5" yrs data-sort-value="6.5" yrs Appointed Honorary Member in 1915
3 yrs data-sort-value="11.5" yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 1900, Honorary Member in 1910
1 yr 2 yrs
1 yr 1 yr
1 yr 2 yrs
Vacancy during the autumn semester of 1905
1 yr 1 yr
Vacancy during the spring semester of 1907
1 yr 1 yr
1 yr 1 yr
2 yrs 2 yrs
1 yr data-sort-value="2.5" yrs
3 yrs 3 yrs
5 yrs 5 yrs
26 yrs 26 yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 1932, Honorary Member in 1946
4 yrs 4 yrs
19 yrs 19 yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 1961, Honorary Member in 1969
7 yrs 7 yrs
7 yrs 7 yrs
2 yrs 2 yrs
5 yrs 5 yrs
7 yrs 7 yrs Joint conductorship with Henrik Wikström
11 yrs 18 yrs Total tenure inclusive of joint conductorship with John Schultz
11 yrs 11 yrs Appointed Honorary Conductor in 2019
data-sort-value="0.5" yr data-sort-value="0.5" yr Acting conductor
Incumbent, conductor de facto from 2020, spring

List of presidents

The president is the chairman of the committee.

Presidents
FromToNameNotes
No presidents proper before 1884
1884 1886
No presidents proper from 1886 to 1895
1896 1896
No presidents proper from 1896 to 1902
1903 1905
1905 1907
1908 1908
1908 1911
1911 1912
1912 1912
1913 1913 Acting
1913 1913
1914 1915
1916 1916
1916 1918
1919 1920
1920 1921
1922 1923
1923 1925
1925 1926
1926 1926
1927 1927
1927 1928
1928 1928
1929 1931
1931 1932
1932 1934
1934 1936
1937 1937
1937 1940
1940 1944
1945 1947
1947 1949
1949 1951
1951 1952
1952 1955
1955 1957
1957 1959
1959 1961
1961 1963
1963 1965
1965 1967
1967 1968
1968 1969
1969 1970
1970 1972
1972 1974
1974 1975
1975 1976
1976 1978
1978 1980
1980 1982
1982 1983
1983 1984
1984 1988 Appointed Honorary Member in 2013
1988 1990
1990 1991
1991 1992
1992 1993
1993 1994
1994 1995
1995 1995 Acting
1996 1997
1998 2000 Appointed Honorary Member in 2023
2001 2003
2004 2005
2006 2007
2008 2009
2010 2011
2012 2013
2014 2015
2016 2018
2019 2019
2020 2021
2022 Incumbent

Present activities

Being the oldest extant male voice choir in Finland, Akademiska Sångföreningen has always cared particularly for the classical Finnish male voice repertoire. Among the composers whose compositions form part of the choir's standard repertoire are honorary members Jean Sibelius, Selim Palmgren and Erik Bergman, as well as fellow composers Toivo Kuula and Leevi Madetoja. Furthermore, being a Finland-Swedish organization, the choir has always seen it as a natural and important task to champion the Swedish-speaking minority culture in Finland. Hence, the standard repertoire encompasses not only choral works of Finnish and Finland-Swedish origin, but also many works of Swedish origin, for example by honorary member Hugo Alfvén.

As implied by its name, the choir is an academic or students' choir, and like its Helsinki sister choir the Academic Female Voice Choir Lyran (Swedish: Akademiska Damkören Lyran) an independent 'music corporation' (Swedish: musikkorporation, Finnish: musiikkikorporaatio) affiliated with the University of Helsinki. The choir presently comprises some 50 active singers, many of whom are university students. Concerts are given regularly in Finland, and the choir travels abroad frequently. In addition to most European countries, the choir has been on tour in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Singapore.

Particularly in recent years, the choir has devoted itself to actively producing records, explicitly in order to document high quality male voice choir repertoire in Swedish. Apart from Swedish, the choir also sings in the parody language Transpiranto on the record Happi kvam pippi, which was released in 2006. A later album, Hymn to Finland, was produced by Swedish label BIS Records and documents works for male voice choir by founder Fredrik Pacius. The record was released on 19 March 2009, the 200th anniversary of Pacius' birth.

The choir maintains contacts with other similar choirs, in Finland in particular with male voice academic choirs Brahe Djäknar in Turku and the YL Male Voice Choir (Finnish: Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat) in Helsinki, and in Sweden in particular with Orphei Drängar in Uppsala, Stockholm Academic Male Chorus (Swedish: Stockholms Studentsångare) in Stockholm, Linköping University Male Voice Choir (Swedish: Linköpings Studentsångare) in Linköping and Lund University Male Voice Choir (Swedish: Lunds Studentsångförening) in Lund.

Ever since 1954, the choir has collaborated extensively with the Academic Female Voice Choir Lyran (Swedish: Akademiska Damkören Lyran), the only other Swedish-language University of Helsinki choir. The two choirs give several annually recurring concerts together.

Discography

Studio, live and selections albums primarily featuring the choir
YearTitleTranslationConductor(s)LabelFormatNotes
1964 Akademiska Sångföreningen 1838–1963 125th anniversary concert repertoire
1967 Bellman och serenader 'Carl Michael Bellman and serenades'
1975 Studentsången i Kajsaniemi 'The students' singing in Kaisaniemi Park' Akademiska Sångföreningen
1980 Etude
1983 Magnificat
1988 A la carte Various Akademiska Sångföreningen Selected live recordings from the Akademen à la carte concerts 1980–1987
1995 Första maj 'May Day' Akademiska Sångföreningen
1999 Julstämning 'Christmas spirit' , Akademiska Damkören Lyran & Akademiska Sångföreningen Christmas album; in collaboration with the Academic Female Voice Choir Lyran
2002 Skaparegestalter 'Creator figures' Fuga
2005 För ögonblicket 'At the moment' Fuga
2006 Happi kvam pippi Fuga Translations into the parody language Transpiranto
2009 Hymn to Finland: Fredrik Pacius: Works for Male-Voice Choir
2011 Julen vi minns 'The Christmas we remember' , Akademiska Damkören Lyran & Akademiska Sångföreningen Christmas album; in collaboration with the Academic Female Voice Choir Lyran
2013 Från tidevarv till tidevarv 'From epoch unto epoch' Various Fuga Selections album; released for the 175th anniversary
2013 Solglitter 'The sun's glistening' Fuga
2016 I Dreamt: Beställningsverken 2007–2013 'I Dreamt: Works commissioned 2007–2013' Fuga

External links