Wall Street Journal Reviews New Book About Mormon Tabernacle Choir

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Morgan Hampton

Joined: Jan 2015

This article was originally written by Alex Beam forย the Wall Street Journal.

The history of the Mormonsย is neither long nor complicated. Founded in 1830 by Joseph Smith in western New York, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints abandoned the settled United States after Smithโ€™s assassination in Illinois in 1844, establishing their new Zion in the Utah Territory. The refractory, polygamist Mormons spent most of the 19th century warring with American power; then most of the 20th trying to assimilate into mainstream America.

What do we really know about the Mormons? Weโ€™ve probably all seen a squeaky-clean, Romney-esque missionary on our doorstep. Thanks to โ€œThe Book of Mormonโ€ musical, thousands of us have become acquainted with Joseph Smithโ€™s miraculous โ€œgolden Bible,โ€ delivered to him by the angel Moroni. We know they eschew caffeine and alcohol. The one thing we would recognize as impossibly normal is the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, which weโ€™ve all heard performing at the Super Bowl or Christmastime. The singers look pretty much like us and thatโ€™s not a coincidence.

As Michael Hicks shows in โ€œThe Mormon Tabernacle Choir: A Biography,โ€ for more than a century the โ€œChoir has hunted down national respectability like a marksman.โ€ These singing Saints have performed at Mount Rushmore and in five presidential inaugurations. Jimmy Stewart, Snoopy and Donald Duck have all wielded the conductorโ€™s baton.

Read the rest of the article atย wsj.com.