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Early
in her career, Helen
Kemp,
a lyric soprano, was well known for oratorio and recital performances.
It was her love for the art of singing that propelled her into the
field of children's choirs, which she regarded as the seed-bed for
musical, artistic and personal growth of young choristers.
Helen Kemp has
been training children and their teachers in the art of choral singing
for more than six decades. Known internationally as a specialist
in the area of training young voices, she has served as guest conductor
and clinician in all 50 states as well as in countries around the
world in both university and church settings. A hallmark of her
work is her ability to empower dedicated volunteers to be successful
choir directors, as well as to present techniques so solid and engaging
that highly-trained professionals continue to learn from her.
She has guided
and shaped successful children's choirs in churches, schools and
communities in North American and beyond, as evidenced in a new
documentary video, A Helen Kemp Portrait (Choristers Guild).
Her books and prepared instructional materials have become standard
resources, and church choir directors around the world use her text,
Of Primary Importance, and its Volume II sequel. Her choral
compositions for children are widely performed. She is also the
subject of a doctoral dissertation by Christine Farrier entitled
Body, Mind, Spirit, Voice: Helen Kemp and the Development of
the Children's Choir Movement (Univ. of N. Carolina, Greensboro,
1992).
Helen and her
late husband John Kemp served as founding members and leaders of
Choristers Guild, the international organization for children's
choirs. The Kemps served two tenures on the faculty of Westminster
Choir College, Princeton, NJ, and held church positions in several
states, including one at First Presbyterian Church, Oklahoma City,
where they spent 20 years developing an acclaimed church music program.
Upon her retirement from Westminster Choir College, Kemp was named
Professor Emerita of Voice and Church Music, and has been awarded
honorary Doctorates from Westminster Choir College and Shenandoah
University. In 2003, she was awarded The Elaine Brown Award for
Choral Excellence from the Pennsylvania ACDA, and a lifetime membership
award from the Presbyterian Association of Musicians.
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