Some people say that 60 is the new 50. If that’s the case, then why the age limit for members of The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square? It can’t be possible that one simply loses the ability to sing once they hit the magic number of 60. So why the restriction?
It all started in 1974, when Jerold Ottley was asked to be the director of the Choir. At the time, the president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Spencer W. Kimball, counseled him to “take a close look at everything that the organization stands for—all of its traditions, all of its habits, all of its dreams and hopes for the future, and try to massage them so they will fit the world in which we are now living.”
Ottley felt the Choir organization was a 19th-century concept in the way it functioned and knew the Choir could not continue to live in the past while maintaining a national reputation. President Kimball asked Ottley to establish an impartial retirement policy for Choir members. Ottley was tasked with taking the emotion out of retirement, as the then-current process of auditioning and retirement was chaotic and caused problems and divisions among Choir members.
After some time and thought, Ottley proposed the new retirement policy of 60 years of age or 20 years of service, whichever came first. The change was very hard for some at the beginning, but they stuck to the policy so everyone knew when it was coming.
In 1999, another shift happened when the minimum age was changed from 30 to 25, as the Mormon Youth Symphony and Chorus dissolved and the Orchestra at Temple Square was formed. Lowering the age of the Choir members allowed many of these singers and musicians who were younger in age to audition during this reorganization. The change lowered the median age of the Choir dramatically. The same retirement process instituted in 1974 is still functioning well 40 years later!
In the video below, the Choir sings the Broadway classic from Fiddle on the Roof , “Sunrise, Sunset,” in which the lyrics describe change. Yearly changes are inevitable within the Choir, but the quality musicians and message of hope will remain as it has for over 100 years.