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Jonathon Welch

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Jonathon Welch
Jonathon Welch, June 2008
Jonathon Welch, June 2008
Background information
Born (1958-10-05) 5 October 1958 (age 66)
Ripponlea, Victoria, Australia
GenresOpera, choral
Occupation(s)Tenor singer, choral conductor, voice teacher
Instrument(s)Piano, Voice
Years active1965–present
Websitejonathonwelch.com

Jonathon Charles Welch AM (born 5 October 1958) is an Australian choral conductor, opera singer and voice teacher. As a singer, Welch has been a tenor for the Victoria State Opera, Lyric Opera of Queensland and Opera Australia. During 2006 Welch established The Choir of Hard Knocks comprising homeless and disadvantaged singers from Melbourne. The choir's formation was the subject of a five-part documentary series of the same name televised during mid-2007 on Australian Broadcasting Corporation. In June 2009 on the Queen's Birthday, Welch was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia with the citation, "For service to the arts as an operatic performer and vocal coach, and to the community as the founder and musical director of the Choir of Hard Knocks". On 1 April that year he had released his autobiography, Choir Man.[1]

Biography

Welch grew up in the Melbourne suburb of Ripponlea. His father, Kenneth Welch, was an engineer born in Sydney to English parents Thomas Archibald and Ella Thrale Welch. His mother, Olive Margaret Hando, was the daughter of Charles and Florence Amelia Hando, farmers from Charlton in rural Victoria. Kenneth and Olive married in 1948 and settled in Melbourne, where Olive worked as a legal secretary. Welch's older sister is Andrea (born c. 1951) and his older brother is Glenn (born c. 1953). They have an adopted younger sister, Elizabeth. Welch attended Ripponlea Primary School. His first job, at eight years old, was selling newspapers directly to motorists. Olive and Andrea sang and played the piano at home, while Kenneth enjoyed listening to opera and Gilbert and Sullivan.[2]

At the age of seven or eight, Welch crafted his first public performance – on the stairs to his school's library – a self-adapted version of Winnie the Pooh and charged his fellow school mates sixpence each. In October 1966 he started piano lessons with Valda Johnstone.[2] As a boy soprano, Welch sang at the local Presbyterian Church, St Margaret's. His parents separated in 1969 and subsequently divorced – the four children remained with Olive.[3] He completed his secondary education at Melbourne High School and commenced a teaching course at Melbourne State College (which later became a faculty of the University of Melbourne).[4]

By 1980 Welch left his teaching course and became a member of the Victoria State Opera chorus as a tenor, making his professional debut in 1981.[5][6] Olive died of lung cancer when he was 23 years old.[5] He performed in the Victorian State Opera's first production of The Pirates of Penzance (1983).[5] He followed with four years (1984 to 1988) in Brisbane, where he became principal tenor for the Lyric Opera of Queensland while also studying at Queensland Conservatorium of Music.[5] In 1988 Welch joined Opera Australia as a tenor and sang alongside Joan Sutherland at the Sydney Opera House.[4][7] By 1994 he had founded Tenor Australis with fellow tenor, Gerry Sword.[8] In 1997 he worked with the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Choir and by year's end was their musical director.[9]

At the end of 1999 Welch travelled to Canada for a holiday. While there, he read a magazine article about Montreal's Homeless Men's Choir.[5][10] In 2001 Welch formed the Sydney Street Choir[11] – to establish a choir of homeless people for a television project.[12] He also formed or has led other choirs including Geelong Pop Choir and Pop Kidz, Australian Pop Choir, and Melbourne Gay and Lesbian Chorus.[8] In 2003 Welch explained his motivation:

Music I think was given to me as a gift. And I believe it was given to me not just for myself but in my ability to perform and teach is to give enjoyment to others. I believe that's why I was put on this earth ... [the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Choir] in many ways were a catalyst for me, making a very big career change from just singing to go back to teaching and conducting. And the joy I got from that really inspired me to go on to create the Street Choir and Pop Kidz and the Australian Pop Choir.

— "The Gift of Song", Compass, 25 December 2003, ABC Television[13]

In September 2006 Welch created The Choir of Hard Knocks,[7][11] which is made up of homeless and disadvantaged singers from Melbourne, "Welch was compelled to form the choir after reading an article about a choir for homeless people in Montreal".[10] It was funded by RecLink, a non-profit charity and welfare organisation.[14] The process of forming the ensemble was televised on Australian Broadcasting Corporation during mid-2007 as a five-part documentary series of the same name.[15][16] Also that year, Welch issued a solo album, With a Song in My Heart on ABC Records.[17]

From June to August 2008 Welch was a judge on TV talent competition, Battle of the Choirs. In March 2009 he had a falling out with RecLink and The Choir of Hard Knocks was replaced by Choir of Hope and Inspiration in April.[14] He also started a new community project, THECHO!R, that year. Welch developed another choir, Voices from the Inside, for the November 2009 TV series, Jail Birds, with female inmates of HM Prison Tarrengower.[18]

In November 2009, Welch initiated the inaugural Social Inclusion Week "to connect people, encourage participation and form communities".[19]

Welch was the music director for the KwaYa Uganda project in September 2012 and April 2013.

Beyond Hard Knocks, a "where are they now" documentary on the journey of the original Choir of Hard Knocks members and their founding director, was released in September 2013 and shown on GEM TV in November 2014.

The inaugural Australian cruise of the performing arts on the MS Radiance of the Seas in November 2014 included Welch as well as, among others, Cheryl Barker, David Hobson, Colin Lane, Teddy Tahu Rhodes, Simon Tedeschi, Elaine Paige, and Marina Prior.[20]

In addition to the information above, Welch has founded:

File:Jonathon Welch 2008.jpg
Welch, with his Australian Local Hero Award, in front of Parliament House, Canberra on Australia Day 2008.[8]
  • Melbourne Festival of Choirs between 2010–2012. This became the Melbourne International Singers Festival from 2013.
  • Sing For a Cure, cancer fundraising concert series launched 2011
  • School of Hard Knocks, launched September 2012
  • Only Women Aloud, formed September 2012
  • Melbourne Eisteddfod, launched in 2013
  • Brisbane International Singers Festival in 2016
  • Play It Forward in September 2018. Play It Forward provides a unique range of tailored inclusive arts programs, events and projects for all Australians.

Welch finished as artistic director with Choir of Hard Knocks in December 2018, after 13 years in the role. Danielle Matthews and Adam Przewlocki have taken over as the choir's co-artistic directors. Welch is now a Patron of the choir.[21]

In 2020, Welch competed in the television singing competition The Voice.[22] Boy George picked him for his team in the blind auditions where Welch sang "This Is the Moment". He then lost in the battle where he sang "Stand by Me".

Personal life

Welch is an openly gay performer,[23] and has led both the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Choir and the Melbourne Gay and Lesbian Chorus. In late December 2000 Welch met his future domestic partner, Matt (an electrical engineer from Orion, Illinois),[24] on the Pacific cruise ship Regal Princess, where Welch was on a working holiday with Tenor Australis providing on-board entertainment.[4][5][25] As of September 2007 the pair were living in Yarraville, and had been together for six-and-a-half years.[5]

Awards and accolades

In 1999 Welch won the Australasian Choral Championships at the City of Sydney Eisteddfod. South Sydney Council, in 2002, presented him with a community services award. In 2007 he won the John Campbell "Mo" Fellowship Award.[5] Welch was the 2008 winner of the Australian Local Hero Award – a part of the Australian of the Year awards.[8] The award was in recognition of his work with The Choir of Hard Knocks.[10] The National Australia Day Council stated that he had "touched the heart of the nation when he demonstrated the power of singing in building and renewing promising lives that had been saddened and defeated by circumstance".[8] Also in 2008 Welch was awarded an honorary doctorate from Griffith University.[26]

Honours

In June 2009 on the Queen's Birthday he was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia with the citation, "For service to the arts as an operatic performer and vocal coach, and to the community as the founder and musical director of the Choir of Hard Knocks".[16]

References

  1. ^ "Choir Man / Jonathon Welch as Told to Meg Mundell". Trove, National Library of Australia. 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2012. He is the man who brought you the award-winning Choir of Hard Knocks − made up of the homeless and the disadvantaged − the judge on Battle of the Choirs‚ a highly renowned opera singer and conductor who has worked with some of Australia's most talented performers. But Jonathon Welch's own story is less well known‚ and here he tells it in his own words for the first time.
  2. ^ a b Welch & Mundell 2009, Chapter 1: Finding My Voice
  3. ^ Welch & Mundell 2009, Chapter 2: Singing Through Silence.
  4. ^ a b c "Transcripts – Jonathon Welch". Talking Heads with Peter Thompson. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). 20 August 2007. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Munro, Peter (8 September 2007). "With a song in his heart". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  6. ^ "Speaker Jonathon Welch". Speakers Bureau ICMI. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  7. ^ a b Cooke, Dewi (9 June 2007). "Finding Each Other Choir's Greatest Success". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Jonathon Welch 2008 Award". National Australia Day Council. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  9. ^ Welch & Mundell 2009, p. 161"As luck would have it, in 1997 half of the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Choir was heading off to the Gay Games in Amsterdam–and I was invited to assist with rehearsals before the choir's departure, in order to look after the members who ... It was also a time of great exploration and activity; by the end of 1997, I was music director of the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Choir;"
  10. ^ a b c Deveny, Catherine (26 May 2007). "Choir Tugs at the Heartstrings". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  11. ^ a b McManus, Bridget (21 October 2006). "Homeless Choir Sings to the Beat of City Street". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  12. ^ "The Emotional Journey". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 18 November 2007. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  13. ^ "The Gift of Song". Compass. ABC Television. 25 December 2003. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  14. ^ a b Magee, Antonia (30 April 2009). "Choir of Hard Knocks Will Go on Under New Banner". Herald Sun. Melbourne. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
  15. ^ "Opera House Special". The Choir of Hard Knocks. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2007. Archived from the original on 23 September 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  16. ^ a b "Welch, Jonathon Charles". It's an Honour – Government of Australia. 8 June 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  17. ^ "With a Song in My Heart". ABC Shop. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). 2007. Archived from the original on 31 December 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  18. ^ Turner, Steve (17 November 2009). "Jail Birds: Teaching Prisoners to Sing". Breakfast. Radio National. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  19. ^ "Dr. Jonathon Welch AM". Social Inclusion Week. Retrieved 27 August 2012.[dead link]
  20. ^ "Bravo! A Cruise of the Performing Arts", Stage Whispers
  21. ^ https://choirofhardknocks.org.au/our-history
  22. ^ Jonathon Welch, Nine Entertainment
  23. ^ Welch & Mundell 2009, p. [page needed]"I'd also decided to take my newly found outward confidence and tell my brother Glenn, and his new wife, Annette, and my sister, Andrea, that I was gay."
  24. ^ Welch & Mundell 2009, Introduction: A Call from the Blue.
  25. ^ Welch & Mundell 2009, Chapter 8: Sounds of the Street.
  26. ^ "Jonathon Welch 2008 Award". Australian of the Year. Retrieved 23 May 2013.

Bibliography