Clash of the Choirs
Clash of the Choirs | |
---|---|
Created by | Friday TV |
Presented by | Maria Menounos |
Judges | Michael Bolton Patti LaBelle Nick Lachey Kelly Rowland Blake Shelton |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 |
Production | |
Production location(s) | Brooklyn, New York |
Running time | 2 hours |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Picture format | 480i (NTSC), 720p (HDTV) |
Original release | 17 December – 20 December 2007 |
External links | |
Website |
Clash of the Choirs is a reality talent contest miniseries that debuted on NBC in the United States on December 17, 2007. There were four episodes scheduled in the “quick competition”.[1] Maria Menounos is the host of the program, which was performed live from Stage One at Steiner Studios in Brooklyn, New York.
The format was developed by Friday TV from an idea from the Swedish singer and choir leader Caroline af Ugglas.
The format was a multi-city “bragging rights” competition between 20-person choirs assembled in the hometowns of the recording artists that support them. In the 2007 competition, the choirs competed for a cash prize of $250,000, backed in part by Sony Pictures in support of its upcoming movie release, First Sunday. The film, about petty criminals using a choir in a neighborhood church as part of their scheme, was released 11 January 2008, in the United States and Canada and throughout Europe in April 2008.[2] The prize was in the form of a contribution to a charity active in the artist's hometown.
The choir led by former 98° singer Nick Lachey won the 2007 competition, which was decided by public vote after four nights of live performances. Patti LaBelle's choir finished second, followed by Blake Shelton's, Michael Bolton's, and Kelly Rowland's. The remaining teams received $50,000 each of donations, courtesy of General Electric, parent company of network owner NBC Universal.
The miniseries aired right as most US primetime broadcast television series had run out of new episodes mainly due to the Writers Guild of America strike.[3][4] Airing the week before Christmas song choices reflected a spiritual tone with one critic speculating that Patti LaBelle's choir was sure to win unless “it’s all a little too much ‘church’ for America”.[5]
NBC announced its 2008-2009 schedule on April 2, 2008, and it also confirmed that Clash of the Choirs would not return for another season.[6] A similar group acapella competition, The Sing-Off, took place in December 2009 with Nick Lachey hosting.
Contents
Teams and results
Celebrity | Hometown | Team's hometown charity | Finish | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nick Lachey | Cincinnati, Ohio | Children's Hospital of Cincinnati | Winners | |
Patti LaBelle | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Lift Our Voices (cancer screenings for African-Americans) | 2nd Place | |
Blake Shelton | Ada, Oklahoma | Project Rebuild (disaster relief), Army MWR | 3rd Place | |
Michael Bolton | New Haven, Connecticut | Domestic Violence Services of New Haven | 4th Place | |
Kelly Rowland | Houston, Texas | Bread of Life (services for homeless people) | 5th Place |
Format
Choir members were selected in open auditions held in each city with the celebrity officiating. After the top twenty singers from each city were selected, they were sent to New York for rehearsals before the live performances began on 17 December 2007.
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I was only interested when they explained that we were going to inspire young, unestablished singers.
— Michael Bolton, commenting on the absence of critical commentary.[7]
Each choir performs, under the direction of their celebrity, and then receives comments from the other competing celebrities. The series has been criticized for not having any real tension or the reality show bite of actual judges.[8] The elimination decision is a public vote by phone and online. The choir with the lowest vote total is eliminated the following night. (In 2007, only the first two nights had eliminations, leading to a "final three.")
As noted, the top prize was a $250,000 donation to the hometown charity.
Season 1
Song list
Each choir performed as part of a multi-choir medley format as well as songs for the finale night of the show (20 December). Of the songs listed below only those performed the first three nights were considered towards the final vote. On the third show (19 December), choirs performed three songs each: one as selected by the producers, then a Christmas carol, then a song in which the celebrity became the lead singer.
- Team Rowland
- 17 December: "Freedom"
- 18 December: ELIMINATED
- Team Bolton
- 17 December: "Living on a Prayer"
- 18 December: "Ain't No Mountain High Enough"
- 19 December: ELIMINATED
- Team Shelton
- 17 December: "Life is a Highway"
- 18 December: "Takin' It to the Streets"
- 19 December: "Home," "Joy to the World" (medley of traditional carol and Three Dog Night version), "This Can't Be Good"
- Team LaBelle
- 17 December: "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands"
- 18 December: "I'll Stand By You"
- 19 December: "Jesus Take the Wheel," "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year," "Somewhere Over the Rainbow"
- 20 December: "No More Drama," "We Are The Champions"
- Team Lachey
- 17 December: "Unwritten"
- 18 December: "Friends in Low Places"
- 19 December: "Flight of the Bumblebee" (only a cappella song in entire competition), "All I Want for Christmas Is You," "What's Left of Me"
- 20 December: "What A Wonderful World", "Sing a Song"
Reception
Clash was the top rated show on 19 December and had a viewership of 8.3 million (2.4/7) and "remained steady in adults 18-49" according to Nielsen Media Research.[9][10] The title sequence created by Framework Studio won a Telly Award[11]
U.S. Nielsen Ratings
Episode Number | Episode | Rating | Share | Rating/Share (18-49) |
Viewers (millions) |
Rank (Overall) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1" | 5.4 | 7 | 2.5/7 | 8.13 | TBA |
2 | "Episode 2" | 5.2 | 8 | 2.4/8 | 7.73 | TBA |
3 | "Episode 3" | 5.4 | 9 | 2.4/7 | 8.23 | TBA |
4 | "Episode 4" | 5.6 | 9 | 2.3/7 | 8.06 | TBA |
International versions
Country | Title | Host | Network | First Aired |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australia[12] | Battle of the Choirs | David Koch | Seven Network | May 2008 |
Catalonia[13] | Oh Happy Day | Eduard Farelo | TV3 | September 21, 2013 |
China[14][15] | Mengxiang Hechangtuan 梦想合唱团 | Sa Beining 撒贝宁 | CCTV-1 | 2011 |
Denmark[16] | AllStars | Lisbeth Østergaard | TV2 | 2008 |
Estonia[17] | Laululahing | Tarmo Leinatamm | etv | 2008 |
Finland[18] | Kuorosota | Kristiina Komulainen | Nelonen | 2009 |
France[19] | La Bataille des Chorales | Benjamin Castaldi | TF1 | 2009 |
Galicia[20] | Oh Happy Day | Rodrigo Vázquez | TVG | 2015 |
Latvia[21] | Koru Kari | Lauris Reiniks | TV3 | 2008, 2013 |
Lithuania[22] | Chorų karai | Vytautas Šapranauskas & Jurgita Jurkuté | TV3 | January 16, 2010 |
Norway[23] | Det store korslaget | Øyvind Mund | TV2 | 2009 |
Poland[24] | Bitwa na głosy | Hubert Urbański & Piotr Kędzierski | TVP 2 | 2011 |
Russia | Битва хopов | Valery Meladze | Rossiya 1 | September 16, 2012 |
South Africa[25] | Clash of the Choirs South Africa | Bonang Matheba | DStv | January 27, 2013 |
Spain[26] | La Batalla de los Coros | Josep Lobató | Cuatro | 2008 |
Sweden[27] | Körslaget | Gry Forssell | TV4 | March 29, 2008 |
Switzerland[28] | Kampf der Chöre | Sven Epiney | SF 1 | 2010 |
Turkey[29] | Korolar Çarpışıyor | Behzat Uighur | Show TV | 2009 |
Ukraine | Битва хорів | Yuriy Horbunov | 1+1 | November 10, 2013 |
Vietnam | Hợp ca tranh tài | Nguyên Khang | VTV3 | February 24, 2012 |
Production
Clash of the Choirs was produced by BBC Worldwide America, also responsible for the ABC hit series Dancing with the Stars. The format is distributed by Friday TV, which is owned by the Scandinavian production company Metronome Film & Television.
The first and third episodes were two hours in length. The second was one hour long, and the finale was also initially scheduled to be an hour. However, on 20 December 2007, NBC announced it would expand the finale from one to two hours.[30]
Clash of the Choirs now airs on The Gospel Music Channel (GMC).
Sponsors
On the first episode, GE pledged $250,000 to the Disabled American Veterans. This was announced just before the performance of the Shelton choir, which features two soldiers from the Army base at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. T-Mobile was another sponsor of the miniseries.
See also
- The Sing-Off
- American Idol
- Dancing with the Stars
- America's Got Talent
- So You Think You Can Dance
- Battle of the Choirs, the Australian version of the show.
- Korenslag, the Dutch version of the show.
References
- ↑ Remaining choirs will raise the roof as competition ends December 19, 2007. [1]
- ↑ First Sunday (2008) - Release dates
- ↑ Strikewatch: Dear Santa, Make It Stop by Kristin Dos Santos on Tue, Dec 18, 2007 [2]
- ↑ Clash of Choirs finale goes up against lots of reruns ERIC KOHANIK, CanWest News Service. [3]
- ↑ About Last Night: Clash of the Choirs Is No Contest Dec 18, 2007 [4]
- ↑ NBC Makes Big Plans for '08-'09 - Network takes gamble on year-round programming - Zap2it
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- ↑ CBS Is Repeat Offender Wednesday: Crime dramas carry network to top of ratings heap, December 20, 2007;[5]
- ↑ CBS prevails in quiet Wednesday primetime By Paul J. Gough, Dec 21, 2007 [6]
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- ↑ NBC delays "Apprentice" to avoid clash Thu Dec 20, 2007 [7]