List of Stanford University a cappella groups
Collegiate a cappella arrived at Stanford University in 1963, when the Stanford Mendicants were founded by a transfer student from Yale University, the school where collegiate a cappella began. The Mendicants were the first a cappella group on the West Coast of the United States.[1] The all-male Mendicants were followed by Stanford's second a cappella group, Counterpoint, the first all-female a cappella group on the West Coast.[2]
By the 1980s, as collegiate a cappella hit an inflection point and the number of groups doubled around the United States,[3] Stanford saw the founding of four more a cappella groups, each with its own initial differentiating focus: Fleet Street (founded 1981, focused on comedy), Mixed Company (founded 1985, Stanford's first co-ed a cappella group), and Everyday People (founded 1987, focused on Motown, R&B, and the burgeoning genre of hip hop music), and Stanford Talisman (founded in 1989, focused on music from the African diaspora).
By the 1990s, Stanford a cappella groups began receiving national recognition for their recorded music, created with audio engineer Bill Hare. In 1995, Fleet Street won the 1995 national Contemporary A Cappella Recording Awards for best album, best song, and best soloist. President of the Society, Deke Sharon, praised the group's work, saying, "The quality [of their music] is fantastic. They're very good performers and their recordings are remarkably professional for a student-run group."[4] In 1999, Stanford groups received a record 14 nominations at the Contemporary A Cappella Recording Awards. Sharon, said, "it's rare for so many excellent groups to come out of one school."[5][6]
List of a cappella groups
As of 2019, there are ten a cappella groups at Stanford. Here, in order of founding date:
- Mendicants (f. 1963): Stanford's oldest a cappella group.
- Counterpoint (f. 1979): first all-female collegiate a cappella group on the West Coast.
- Fleet Street (f. 1981): comedy a cappella group known for original songs.
- Mixed Company ("Mixed Co"; f. 1985): group focused on pop and Top 40 hits.
- Everyday People ("EP"; f. 1987): group focused on Hip Hop, R&B, Motown and Soul music.
- Talisman (f. 1989): group with roots in music from South Africa and the African diaspora.
- Harmonics (f. 1991): alternative rock-focused group known for their award-winning recordings.[7]
- Testimony (f. 1991): Christian music a cappella group.
- Raagapella (f. 2002): co-ed a cappella group with a South Asian focus.
- Sing Plus Plus ("Sing++"; f. 2015): group performing Chinese music and other cultural music well-known in Chinese communities.
- O-Tone (f. 2016): group with a focus on East Asian music.
Bibliography
- Brockenbrough, Andy (26 September 1991). "A time to sing and sing and..." published in The Stanford Daily, p. 8. Print.
- Chopra, Nitin (24 September 1998). "A cappella nation: A Stanford tradition," published in The Stanford Daily: Intermission, pp. 5–7. Print.
- Omer, Issra (11 August 2011). "Beyond the barbershop: Stanford’s diverse a capella scene" published online by The Stanford Daily. Online.
References
- ^ Weinstein, Dave (17 October 2003). "Stanford group celebrating 40 years of song". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
- ^ Chopra, Nitin (24 September 1998). "A cappella nation: A Stanford tradition". The Stanford Daily. Vol. 214, no. 5. pp. 5–7. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
- ^ Duchan, Joshua S. (Winter 2007). "Collegiate a Cappella: Emulation and Originality". American Music. 25 (4): 447–506. doi:10.2307/40071679. JSTOR 40071679.
- ^ Yu, Cynthia (28 February 1995). "Fleet Street wins national awards: Album 'What You Want' sweeps three of four categories". The Stanford Daily. Vol. 207, no. 16.
- ^ Yang, Virginia (2 February 1999). "A cappella up for awards: Campus groups win 14 nominations". The Stanford Daily. Vol. 215, no. 2.
- ^ Daly, Bobby (8 April 1999). "Unaccompanied recognition: Stanford groups win national a cappella prizes". The Stanford Daily. Vol. 215, no. 34.
- ^ "The Harmonics". The Harmonics.