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The John Brown University Choir (meeting the Speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly, Flickr photo by niassembly)
 

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Choral Apathy

Choral Apathy »

Choral Apathy
The Choir Girl is accepted into a graduate program and realizes she won't be able to make the summer choir tour. 

I have to admit that when I received my acceptance call from the University, after the initial shock from that message died down, the FIRST thing that popped into my head was: "That means I can't go to Italy." :( Interesting reading today - a choir member is accepted into a graduate program and has to miss the yearly choir competition: For a second I felt like declining my Masters acceptance! I realize that may sound a bit sick to some of you readers . . . I have slowly come to term with the fact that I won't be able to go, trying to find trivial details to make me feel better like "That means I don't have to fundraise like crazy this year! Whoot $2500 saved!", "Nobody knows where Seghizzi is anyway!", and "The performance venue doesn't look that nice". All in attempt to placate my silently suffering self.
 
I have never been through such a bout of choral apathy. It is a deadly thing. It's the crippling unmotivation that is getting me. I feel like I have nothing to work towards this year. Why should I memorize that piece? I won't be able to sing it anyway. Why should I go to that performance? I don't need performance experience anyway. Maybe it's even better for me not to sing since I'm just throwing off the group balance that actually will be touring. I've always known it's important to have a common goal in choir, whether it is for a particular concert or competition, but once that end goal is no longer in sight, it's hard to motivate yourself to continue what you're doing. We all need something to drive us and inspire us to be better. When that stimulus is gone... we're directionless.
A fascinating post, eh? Read more of it here.
 
Not just children anymore

Not just children anymore »

It's not just children anymore
ACDA has a new name for one of the R&S areas and they are talking about it.
 
Here is Robyn Lana, the National Chair for the newly named "Children's and Youth Community Choirs" Repertoire and Standards Committee:
The committee proposed the title change in an attempt to be inclusive and clearly indicate who is served by this R & S area.  We are proud to include our youngest training choirs in community, church, and school programs.  It is our responsibility to build the foundation for the future of choral music in the United States.  We are also proud to serve community youth/children’s choirs that have developed from community, church, and school programs and are not part of regular school curriculum/course offerings.  To those of us active in the field, it has always been clear that "children's choir" involves older youth as well as elementary programs.  As Karen Bruno eloquently pointed out in her October 2009 Choral Journal article “Keep America’s Youth Singing,” much of the national misperception is due to the success of MENC and their service to school based curricula.  Church and community programs have often been misunderstood to fit into such a mold. 
 
Online Auditions for Choir and Voice

Online Auditions for Choir and Voice »

If voice teachers are giving voice lessons via Skype and Eric Whitacre is awarding scholarships from auditions on YouTube, can online choir auditions be very far away?  I can think of "sightreading" as a possible downside, but that's all.
 
What do you think?
 
Skype Voice Lessons:
 
 
 
Eric Whitacre Scholarship Winner:
 
The Progression

The Progression »

The Progression
Do you ever have the sense that your choir thinks you are talking about someone else when you make a correction during a rehearsal?  I do, and one of my students helped me come up with this pyramid yesterday.
The Band Industry is Killing Music Education

The Band Industry is Killing Music Education »

The Band Industry is Killing Music Education
My colleague told me this story about a recent happening in the "band" world that you may not have heard about:
 
Here is the outline of the story:
 
1.  On January 30, 2005, a parent wrote an article in the Washington Post that bemoaned instrumental music education in general and substandard literature in particular.  He also wrote a "follow on" article entitled "The Repertoire is the Curriculum:  Getting Back to Basics in Music Education" that elaborated on the original issue.
 
2.  All of it caused quite a furor. (He "received more than 100 messages and phone calls from band directors, students, ex-students, elementary school teachers, church musicians . . ") His mail ran about 7 to 1 in favor of what he had said.
 
3.  The parent was asked to write an article for the Journal of the World Association for Symphonic Bands and Ensembles and he did (with Col. Timothy Foley, retired director of the U.S. Marine Band).
 
4.  He was about to publish another article, but the article was pulled at the last minute by a new president of the association.
 
It is a fascinating story.  Click on the links and read about it.  Read more here on a page he calls "The Wonderful People who Killed School Music."
 
 
 
Online ACDA Voting: Highest Turnout Ever

Online ACDA Voting: Highest Turnout Ever »

Online ACDA Voting:  Highest Turnout Ever
It is another great technology development for ACDA:  the turnout for the most recent presidential election was the highest ever and Karen Fulmer was elected President.
 
First, congratulations to Karen.
 
Second, congratulations to ACDA!
 
Here are some of the details:
  • Over 12% of active membership voted in the National election and bylaws.
  • Highest percentage of voting on record. (Participation in voting is one measure of associational loyalty.)
  • First time ACDA has had national election, division elections, and bylaw changes determined by online voting.
  • Voting participation grew steadily throughout the month, but spiked in the last 3 days of voting.
  • NO PAPER BALLOTS were requested, which is an option. No one asked for one and none were used. ACDA National, Division, and State elections are all taking place online now. One of the three bylaw changes included the wording "vote by mail" to include "voting via electronic means" for future elections.
  • Continues Executive Director Tim Sharp's initiative of using technological advancements to improve and enhance the mission and purposes of ACDA.  
It is worth noting that these are the first Bylaw changes in ACDA since 2006 -- another indication of change and improvement. 

Our national organization is moving ahead, one step at a time.

 
Podium 2010 - Where Canadian Choral Communities Meet.

Podium 2010 - Where Canadian Choral Communities Meet. »

Podium 2010 - Where Canadian Choral Communites Meet.
Details of the the biennial ACCC Canadian national choral music conference, known as "Podium" have been released.  This year, the conference runs from May 20th to the 23rd in Saskatoon Saskatchewan.
 
Here are highlights of this year's conference:
 
During this four-day event, delegates will attend concerts from some of the best choirs in Canada including the Canadian Chamber Choir, the Elora Festival Singers and the National Youth Choir.  Delegates will be able to visit the MarketPlace Trade Show, network with other professionals and choral enthusiasts, hear presentations at key choral development sessions such as 'WOW-ing' Your Audience, Developing Tone by Choosing the Right Repertoire and French Diction.  Three young emerging conductors will have the distinct opportunity of completing a series of Master Classes with Dr. Julia Davids, Artistic Director of the Canadian Chamber Choir.
 
Follow this link for more information about the conference, and to register online.
 
What to wear

What to wear »

What to wear
The age old debate of what a classical musician should wear on stage continues over at The Rambler.
 
Here is a sample of his post.  Read the full post at this link
 
There are the beginnings of a debate on Twitter on the vexed subject of formal wear for performers at concerts. I go to enough contemporary music concerts that I very rarely see performers in full formal dress any more. When I do, it doesn’t bother me that much – although it does still surprise. What disturbs me more are the peculiar ritual/non-ritual practices that occur before the music begins. (And this, again, is not something that I ever remember having seen at a new music concert except occasionally those involving the major venues and the large ensembles – new music players tend to be pretty slick at getting on stage and getting playing.)
The debate about formal wear is generally couched as part of the wider debate about increasing attendance at classical music events. Such a debate is especially governed by a certain green-eyed view of the audience who go to plenty of other cultural events – arts galleries, the theatre and so on. There are plenty of people who go to the theatre all the time, the argument goes; how do we get them to come to classical concerts too?
My choir has experimented in the past by moving away from the tuxedo, but we always come back.  Do you feel that wearing a tuxedo in concert hampers efforts to increase attendance? 

I don't.

 
Happy Birthday, Franz Schubert - b. 1797

Happy Birthday, Franz Schubert - b. 1797 »

We celebrate the great Franz Schubert:
 
 
The Chant Jock

The Chant Jock »

The Chant Jock
It's true.
The Recovering Choir Director brings us news of the attractive leading the way with chant.  Didn't this happen in the 1980's?
 
 

 
 
 

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Choral News

Britain's Got Talent singer files discrimination complaint

Britain's Got Talent singer files discrimination complaint »

Piers Morgan hit the buzzer before she had even completed the first line of the power ballad You Raise Me Up, as did Simon Cowell. The third judge, Amanda Holden, hung on until she reached the chorus.
 

Czikai is so aggrieved at her treatment – and in particular at what she sees as the programme's refusal to take into account a medical condition – that she has complained to the media regulator Ofcom and lodged a complaint of unfairness and discrimination with the employment tribunal.

The former nurse claims that her performance suffered as a result of cervical spine neuritis, which can cause head and shoulder pain and which affects her ability to hear her own singing voice in noisy environments such as the audition arena.

 
Bach's Arabian Passion

Bach's Arabian Passion »

 How does the Arabian Passion According to J.S. Bach featuring Arab musicians, two jazz saxophonists, a string quartet and a Lebanese singer grab you? The Arabian Passion is the brainchild of Vladimir Ivanoff, who is the Bulgarian founder and music director of the culture straddling ensemble Sarband. Ivanoff sees parallels between the story of occupation and persecution in the Middle East in biblical times, as portrayed in Bach’s Saint Matthew and Saint John Passions, and the tensions in the Middle East today. The Arabian Passion is the result, a 're-interpretation' of sections from both Passions for Sarband, theModern String Quartet and singer Fadia el-Hage.
 
Music Returns To Port-au-Prince

Music Returns To Port-au-Prince »

Amid the desperation and despair in earthquake-ravaged Port-au-prince, musicians from Haiti's national chorus, jazz band and philharmonic gave their first post-quake concert. The musicians were able to rescue some instruments from the rubble, and they held the concert in the devastated neighborhood of Bell Aire to bring hope to the displaced.
 
Audio report on NPR.
 
Composer John Leavitt @ MidAmerica Nazarene University

Composer John Leavitt @ MidAmerica Nazarene University »

Composer, conductor, teacher, and church musician are all titles familiar to John Leavitt. To the students of MidAmerica Nazarene University, he is the new choir director.

Just days before the end of the fall semester, Professor Juan Hernandez stepped down as the Director of Choral Activities to take the position of

Assistant Dean of Music at Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, Arizona. Music professor Mary Jane Wilder-Hardee headed the search committee that was left with the difficult task of finding someone qualified to fill the position before the start of the spring semester.

She was advised by a nationally respected composer to pursue Leavitt.

"I saw an opportunity to network and ask experts their ideas and was told Dr. John Leavitt would be a good person to interview," Wilder-Hardee said.

With only days until classes began, the music department approached Leavitt about interviewing for the position. Because of weather delays, Leavitt was brought in on the first day of class, interviewed, and was offered the position.

"I thought this would be a great opportunity and great fit," Leavitt said.
 
Tim Sharp Premieres New Handel Work

Tim Sharp Premieres New Handel Work »

by Rainier Ehrhardt/Staff
 
It took classical choral composer George Handel less than a month to write his masterpiece Messiah , but more than 250 years for a lesser work to see the light of day. Tim Sharp conducts members of the combined Davidson Chorale, Southern Chorale from Georgia Southern University, and the Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church Chancel Choir as they rehearse a new Handel piece at Sacred Heart Cultural Center.
 
Tim Sharp conducts members of the combined Davidson Chorale, Southern Chorale from Georgia Southern University, and the Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church Chancel Choir as they rehearse a new Handel piece at Sacred Heart Cultural Center.  Rainier Ehrhardt/Staff
 
Tonight, the Davidson Fine Arts School Chorale, the Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church Chancel Choir and the Southern Chorale of Georgia Southern University will unite at the Sacred Heart Cultural Center to perform Handel's Rejoice, the Lord is King . It will be, 250 years after the composer's death, the U.S. premiere.

The concert, which features a number of Handel pieces, will be directed by Tim Sharp, the executive director of the American Choral Directors Association. His association with the piece began in an English archive in 2005.

While on a sabbatical at Cambridge University, Sharp was alerted to incomplete manuscripts in the extensive Handel collection at the Fitzwilliam Museum. Though the pieces, which were a melody and coded bass parts written over a Charles Wesley hymn, had been published in the 19th century, they were considered sketches rather than complete works and were remembered only by a few scholars and enthusiasts. It was something, Sharp said, he had to see.

"Bear in mind, this kind of work is difficult," he said. "You go into a protected room, and the curator must stay with you the entire time. You only get to see the material you requested. It's not like you can ask to see something else on the spot. They'll tell you to come back tomorrow."

What Sharp saw was potential. He copied the manuscripts and took them to writing partner Wes Ramsey with the idea that the notes could be expounded upon.

"My idea was to try and figure out what Handel would have done had he blown it out, had he done this in the style of Messiah."

Timothy Powell, the director of choral studies at Davidson Fine Arts Magnet School, said bringing the Handel piece to Augusta originated with the idea of doing a festival-style concert at Sacred Heart. It was his friend Sharp who suggested he commemorate the 250th anniversary of Handel's death with a performance of Rejoice .

Powell said Handel's approach to composition made filling in the gaps possible in a way it might not have been with another composer.

"That's something that's easy to do with Handel because of the way he wrote," he said. "We have a lot of his scores that started out like this and then later editions where he has filled in those gaps."

Though the results are not, Sharp said, like Messiah , they are certainly worthy of the Handel name.

"It's very concerto-like," he said. "It's big and stately and really, really typical of
 

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