Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers, Sierra Leone 1974
1 media/AMJS Sierra Leone 1974_thumb.jpg 2020-04-30T13:22:44-07:00 Beth McDonald 16200cb3d5a875b72f65508a603e1bfceb2cda24 37308 2 The Jubilee Singers, led by Albert McNeil (center), perform for the president of Sierra Leone in 1974. From the Albert J. McNeil Collection, Gerth Archives and Special Collections, CSU Dominguez Hills. plain 2020-06-28T11:42:36-07:00 Beth McDonald 16200cb3d5a875b72f65508a603e1bfceb2cda24This page is referenced by:
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The Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers
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The Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers (AMJS), known as "America's foremost Negro choir," have played a significant role in the development of African American sacred music traditions in the United States and are among the most honored singing ensembles in the world. The AMJS was founded by choral director Albert McNeil. McNeil was inspired by the story of the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, an all black college choir founded in 1871, made up of four black men and seven black women who gained international fame traveling throughout the United States and Europe giving concerts singing four-part a cappella arrangements of sacred songs called spirituals. In 1968, the AMJS went on their first European tour. Since then, they have travled the globe on 18 sold-out European tours, 12 tours of the United States and Canada, and tours of the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and South America. They were selected three times to serve the U.S. State Department and USIS Cultural Exchange Program, traveling to East Germany, Hungary, Romania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Iran, India, North and West Africa, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates.
Hear the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers perform "I Wanna Be Ready," "In Dat Great Gettin Up Mornin," "O Happy Day," "John the Relevator," "Precious Lord," and "Go Down Moses."
Learn more about the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers in the Albert J. McNeil Collection and the Virginia L. White Collection.
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Albert J. McNeil
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Albert John Joseph McNeil is an American choral conductor, ethnomusicologist, author, and founder of the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers. His career has been dedicated to upholding choral music traditions with the presentation of Negro spirituals and concert music by African American composers. He is Professor Emeritus of Music at the University of California, Davis, where he was director of choral activities for 22 years and headed the Music Education Program.
McNeil was born Alfredo Morales Sanchez on February 14, 1920 in Los Angeles. He was adopted by John and Rodia McNeil, former vaudeville and minstrel show performers. He grew up in Watts with his two sisters, Dorothea and Rena. McNeil's adopted parents maintained friendships with a variety of musical and theatrical artists in Los Angeles, including Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Lionel Hampton, as well as distinguished names in choral music such as Hall Johnson and Jester Hairston. McNeil was frequently called upon by Central Casting of Hollywood to be the on-set choral assistant whenever they needed black singers or background actors, including Porgy and Bess, Carmen Jones, and The Land of the Pharaohs. McNeil earned his undergraduate University of California, Los Angeles in 1942 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in music education and teaching credentials in elementary and secondary education. Soon after, he was awarded his master's degree in choral conducting from UCLA. In 1953, McNeil married Helen Rambo. Their son, Richard "Ricky" John McNeil, was born 1959.
In 1968, McNeil was invited to teach courses in music education and direct the choral ensembles at the University of California at Davis. He was the head of the music education program and director of choral activities for 21 years, and took the UC Davis chorus to England, France, Russia, China, Tahiti, and Australia. While at Davis, spent 10 years as the director for the Sacramento Chorale and co-founded the Sacramento symphony chorus.
In 1968, inspired by the renown Fisk Jubilee Singers, McNeil founded the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers. The Singers have traveled the globe on 18 European tours, 12 tours of the United States and Canada, tours of the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and South America, and were selected three times to serve the U.S. State Department and USIS Cultural Exchange Program. They have played a significant role in the development of African American sacred music traditions in the United States and are among the most honored singing ensembles in the world.
In addition to his teaching and work with the Jubilee Singers, McNeil was active in the church choir community. While McNeil was a student at UCLA he directed the church choirs at the First Baptist Church and the People's Independent Church of Christ. He was Minister of Music at the Congregational Church of Christian Fellowship in Los Angeles for over 30 years, as well as the Director of Music at the Founder’s Church of Religious Science.
McNeil retired from UC Davis in 1990. In retirement, he devoted much of his time to the Albert McNeil Jubilee Singers and their tours. In 2003, McNeil was inducted as a "Living Legend" into the California State University Dominguez Hills Georgia and Nolan Payton Archive of African Diaspora Sacred Music and Musicians. Explore the Albert J. McNeil Collection.