• Sign In
  • ACDA.org
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
ChoralNet

ChoralNet

The professional networking site for the global online choral community.

  • Home
  • Blog
  • ACDA News
  • Events
  • Community
    • Announcements
    • Classifieds

A Conductor’s Guide to Katarina Gimon’s Elements

February 7, 2022 by Amanda Bumgarner Leave a Comment


The February 2022 issue of Choral Journal is online and features an article titled “Contemporary Choral Music in the Classroom: A Conductor’s Guide to Katarina Gimon’s Elements” by Christina Beasley. You can read it in its entirety at acda.org/choraljournal. Following is a portion from the introduction.
_________________

Contemporary music allows the performers to create their own interpretation of the piece and take ownership of the composition that is being presented to their audience. With aleatoric sections of a piece, the performers have control over what the piece sounds like at any given performance, and this sound is always changing. Through the freedom of graphic notation, students are encouraged to make their own conclusions and creatively decide how they want the music to sound. This provides an engaging individual experience for the singer and a communal engagement in the anticipation of what the other choir members will do. Contemporary music in this context is important because it gives choral conductors the opportunity to explore diverse works within the classroom. This diversity does not just come from diverse notation, sounds, and exploration of the human voice but also diversity through polystylism, commonly found in contemporary music.

Many twenty-first-century compositions are using experimental techniques such as graphic notation and aleatoric passages while still making the music accessible to amateur or younger choirs. Canadian composer Katerina Gimon explores aleatoric singing, graphic notation, overtone singing, and body percussion in Elements, her 2013 composition for mixed choir. This piece is approachable and appropriate for singers in the classroom and is a wonderful way to introduce a youth choir to some extended techniques of the voice.

Elements is a choral work written in four movements, each depicting one of the four classical elements: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water. Each movement begins with a set of words used to describe the characteristics of the element. Elements “explores the wide capabilities of the human voice—from overtone singing, to vocal percussion, to colourful vocal timbres.” There is no text throughout the piece except in movement two, “Air”; otherwise, only phonemes are used to convey the feeling of each element. “Fire” is commonly performed alone. In 2019, the Vancouver Youth Choir performed “Fire” at the ACDA National Conference in Kansas City, MO. The performance showcased the explosive and energetic piece with an ensemble of singers aged 15-24. Watch the performance at the link here.

Read the rest of this interview in the February 2022 issue of Choral Journal.


Filed Under: Choral Journal Tagged With: ACDA Membership Benefits, ACDA Publications, Canadian, composer

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • ACDA.org
  • The ChoralNet Daily Newsletter
Advertise on ChoralNet

On This Day
June 25

With no prior conducting experience, Arturo Toscanini made his conducting debut in Rio de Janeiro performing Verdi’s opera “Aida” from memory on this day in 1886.

Would you like to submit a blog post for consideration?

Are you interested in becoming a regular ChoralNet blogger? Please contact ACDA Director of Membership & Communications Sundra Flansburg at .

RSS JW Pepper

  • 5 Things to Consider When Buying Color Guard Equipment
  • PYO Music Institute Presents the 9th Annual Ovation Award in Partnership with J.W. Pepper, Jacobs Music, and WRTI 90.1 FM
  • 10 Easy-To-Learn Funky Tunes for the Stands
  • Zoom F3 Field Recorder Review: The Easiest Way to Get Pro Audio for Your Music Ensembles
  • J.W. Pepper Names Eric King as New Chief Financial Officer
  • The Music Teachers’ Guide to Recording an Ensemble: The Samson C02 Mics Review
  • The Zoom Q8n-4K Handy Video Recorder Review
  • Directors & Parents: Download Our New Contest & Festival Checklist
  • If You Love West Side Story, Listen to These!
  • The Music of Rita Moreno, a West Side Story Icon

RSS NAfME

  • Assessing the Standards: An Exploration of the Respond Model Cornerstone Assessment
  • Nearly Half of the 2023 GRAMMY Music Educator AwardTM Quarterfinalists Are NAfME Members
  • Reevaluating Professional Practice
  • The Importance of Knowledge Transfer in Music Education
  • Star-Songs and Constellations: Lessons from the Global Jukebox
  • NAfME Endorses the Reopen and Rebuild America’s Schools Act of 2021
  • 5 Things Teachers Can Do to Recharge over the Summer
  • 2022 Call for Applications: SRME Executive Committee
  • Yay Storytime! Musical Adventures with Children’s Picture Books, Part Sixteen
  • Yay Storytime! Musical Adventures with Children’s Picture Books, Part Fifteen

Footer

Connect with us!

  • Home
  • About
  • Help
  • Contact Us
  • ACDA.org

Recent Blogs

  • Dropping the Covid Ball with Dr. Nikki Johnson
  • Choral Potpourri/Choral Ethics: Pretension
  • The Schwa [ə] Flaw: Why We Rarely Sing [ə] and What We are Singing Instead
  • Recharge: Creation and J.S. Bach
  • From Matt to Matthew to All of Us: A Cathartic Transformation in Craig Hella Johnson’s Considering Matthew Shepard

American Choral Directors Association

PO Box 1705
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
73101-1705

© 2022 American Choral Directors Association. All rights reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy