Barbershop music is promoted through the use of competition for quartets and choruses run by not-for-profit organizations. Barbershop organizations often provide judging, education, coaching and promotion services for local choruses and quartets.
United States In the United States, there are three major organizations which are intended to preserve the style of barbershop music: The Barbershop Harmony Society, a historically men's organization until 2018; Sweet Adelines International, a women's organization; and Harmony, Incorporated which splintered off from Sweet Adelines International in 1959. Another organization called The Society for the Preservation and Propagation of Barbershop Quartet Singing in the United States (SPPBSQSUS) formed in 2018 as a fraternal organization to preserve and perpetuate all-male barbershop quartet singing; since 2024, it operates as the Worldwide Barbershop Quartet Association (WBQA).
Barbershop Harmony Society (BHS) The revival of a cappella singing took place circa 1938 when tax lawyer Owen C. Cash sought to save the art form from the threat of radio. He garnered support from investment banker Rupert I. Hall. Both came from Tulsa, Oklahoma. Cash was a partisan of quartet singing who advertised the fact that he did not want a cappella to fall by the wayside. Thousands of men responded. Later the "Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America" was established, known by the abbreviation S.P.E.B.S.Q.S.A. at a time when many institutions in the US used multiple initials to denote their function. The group adopted the alternate name "Barbershop Harmony Society" early in its history. While its legal name has never changed, it changed its official brand name to "Barbershop Harmony Society" in 2004. For the majority of its history, the society had all-male membership. It was all-white until 1963 when it allowed black members, and since 2018, it allows women to join as members.
Sweet Adelines International (SAI) , ''the highest ever scoring
Sweet Adelines International barbershop chorus. Sweet Adelines International, a worldwide organization of women singers, was established in 1945 by Edna Mae Anderson of
Tulsa, Oklahoma. The aim was to teach and train its members in music and to create and promote barbershop quartets and other musical groups. By year's end, the first chapter incorporated in Oklahoma with Anderson as its president. Sweet Adelines went international on March 23, 1953, when the first chapter outside the U.S. was chartered in Brandon, Manitoba, Canada. Even though there were international chapters, it was not until May 1991 that the name officially changed to Sweet Adelines International. It has a current membership of 23,000 and holds an annual international singing competition.
Harmony, Incorporated (HI) In 1957, several members of
Sweet Adelines International (SAI) broke from the organization in protest of the policy limiting membership to Caucasian women. In 1958, chapters from Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Orillia, Ontario, also left SAI to form Harmony, Incorporated. (Sweet Adelines changed their policy in 1966). In 1963, a Sweet Adeline chapter in Ottawa, Ontario was threatened with expulsion after accepting a black woman, Lana Clowes, as a member. As a result, Ottawa's Capital Chordettes left SAI to become the seventh chapter to join Harmony, Incorporated. In 2013, Harmony, Inc. announced the creation of the Affiliate membership category, extending membership to men involved with the organization.
International organizations After the establishment of the above organizations, other countries have begun their organizations to promote Barbershop music. These international organizations are often affiliated with one of the United States organizations listed above or by the World Harmony Council. Some are gender exclusive organizations while some are mixed. They include;
British Association of Barbershop Singers, Barbershop Harmony Australia (BHA), Barbershop Harmony New Zealand (BHNZ),
Barbershop in Germany (BinG), Finnish Association of Barbershop Singers (FABS), Holland Harmony (HH), Irish Association of Barbershop Singers (IABS), Ladies Association of Barbershop Singers (LABBS) in the United Kingdom, Spanish Association of Barbershop Singers (SABS), Society of Nordic Barbershop Singers (SNOBS) and the Swiss Association of Barbershop Singers (SWABS). ==Performance groups==