
Boys Keep Singing


What became known as "Boys Keep Singing" was officially known as Widening Young Male Participation in Chorus - a title chosen to reflect its fundamental intention and avoid the word "choir", known to be a disincentive for many young people. It was funded by the AHRC as a knowledge transfer project, that is to say a project that aimed not to create new knowledge, but to transfer existing knowledge to practitioners in the field. It was a collaboration between myself as principal investigator and co-investigators Professor David Howard and Dr Jenevora Williams. David was at the University of York when he was co-investigator, moving to become Head of the Department of Electronic Engineering, Audio, Biosignals and Machine Learning at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is widely recognised as an expert in voice and acoustics. Jenevora was singing consultant and teacher-in-residence for the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain when she was co-investigator. Her PhD study of the vocal health of boy choristers was a landmark in the discipline. My contribution as PI was the result of my previous AHRC funded post-doctoral research fellowship on singing and masculinity.

Values Behind the Actions
Of course I cannot speak for my colleagues, but why should I have devoted so much time and effort to keeping boys singing?
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Gender equity - Now in Western culture an absolute, so girls should enjoy science science and boys should enjoy singing.
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Knowledge - Knowledge is power. Teachers should have good subject knowledge of boys' voices, particularly when they are changing.​
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Leadership - a strong, committed leader is to be found wherever boys buck the trend and sing, so a highly valued quality.
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Time - a key principle of BKS was that sport and singing should not clash in the timetable, so time management by schools must not necessitate sport to be missed for choir.

Twenty Years On
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It is probably a brutal truth that things have not really changed much. Girls still greatly outnumber boys in singing, most boys still think it's uncool to be in a choir and there is still a postcode lottery whereby in the majority of state funded secondary schools there is little or no singing and where there is, it is heavily dominated by girls. There are a few notable exceptions to this where boys do sing, currently perhaps Balcarras School in Gloucestershire but at the time, Guildford County School, which was featured prominently in the project. Other than that, most boys' singing is found independent schools where it is now threatened in some by VAT on school fees. The point of schools such as Balcarras and Guildford is that they demonstrate that where the knowledge and leadership exist, boys do sing in choirs. When they do, somebody will say "Ah, so it's wrong to say boys don't sing", but this is part of a repeating pattern that has been going on over decades. So in terms of monetary value was it "worth it"? At the time, reviewers for Youth Music and the AHRC thought so (twice), but now I have my doubts. As every new admission of girls to a previously boy only choir is celebrated, the probably unintended consequence is a turning of the tide overall even further against boys when it comes to singing. This despite the argument the boys need to be civilised and choirs are one of the best ways of doing this. It's on record that we tried!
Key Publications
2008 How High Should Boys Sing? gender, authenticity and credibility in the young make voice. Aldershot: Ashgate.
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2008 Boyhood Melancholia and the Vocal Projection of Masculinity, THYMOS: Journal of Boyhood Studies, 2(1): 26-45.
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2010 Slappers who gouge your eyes: vocal performance as exemplification of disturbing inertia in gender equality', Gender and Education, 22: (1), 47-62.
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2010 “Real Boys” Don’t Sing, But Real Boys Do: The Challenge of Constructing and Communicating Acceptable Boyhood. Thymos: Journal of Boyhood Studies, 4(1), 54-70.
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2013 Broken voices or a broken curriculum? The impact of research on UK school choral practice with boys, British Journal of Music Education, On-line first, May, 1 - 17.
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2015 Singing in the Lower Secondary School. Oxford: Oxford University Press
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2018 What voices have emerged? Lessons on boys’ vocal dispositions and choral tone from a new choral leaflet series, Music Education Research. On-line first, 1 - 15.​​​​​​​​​