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You are here: Home / Others / More ideas for singer independance

More ideas for singer independance

October 22, 2012 by Richard Sparks Leave a Comment


Thanks to several ChoralNet people for their responses to my last blog post!
 
This post is mostly copied from an earlier post on my own blog–but deals with the same issue from a different angle. It's also on the long side for A ChoralNet blog, but it seemed to make sense to keep all the ideas together.
 
When I was at Pacific Lutheran University, I had a top choir of 44-48 singers, and felt the need for my singers to both be more independent, and to experience some of the great madrigal repertoire for which we had no outlet. Here's what we did:
 
Around 1989 or so I decided I needed a way to get the singers in my choir to be more independent musicians. At the same time I felt there were gaps in the repertoire the students experienced. Given two mixed choirs of 45-50 voices each, plus a men’s and women’s choir, we never did any madrigals. We also didn’t have a vocal jazz ensemble at the time, and in the Northwest, jazz was big in the high schools, so lots of my students missed this. It also filled a gap for my music education students, who would then know some repertoire they’d need.

With those problems in mind, I created an Ensemble Concert: my choir was divided up into (usually) 10 or 11 one-on-a-part ensembles (most SATB, some SSATB and occasionally SSATBB). I gave them some time from our regular choir rehearsals (usually half rehearsals until the last few before the concert), and each ensemble prepared one madrigal and one lighter number (most vocal jazz ballads, but occasional other pieces, too). All had to be a cappella and true one-on-a-part (no doubling allowed). We didn’t use microphones, since going back and forth from amplified to un-amplified in concert wouldn’t work acoustically, and too many students didn’t have experience with microphones (and anyway, it's a huge extra hassle!). Most ensembles arranged their own rehearsals outside of choir time, too.

The concert was a big success, and we did it every year after that until I left in 2001–it survived my departure for a time, but I don't believe it's done anymore.

Things evolved over time. Students got creative in all sorts of ways, from costuming to choreography (amazingly creative, sometimes!). Some students wrote or arranged their own pieces. One year two quartets asked if they could collaborate and did a very good version of Michael Jackson’s Thriller (complete with choreography from the music video and me doing the Vincent Price bit from the organ loft). The Ensemble Concert was tremendous fun for the students and the audience, and I also think the students learned a lot from the process.

How was it organized?

First, I figured out how many ensembles there would be and chose “leaders” for each ensemble. “Leaders” is in quotes because they weren’t the “boss” of their ensemble, although they would help with organization and organize rehearsals. However, other members of the ensemble were expected to take part in evaluating, giving interpretive ideas, etc. I tried to get as many of my music ed students in leadership spots as possible to give them valuable experience, but it was more important to have leaders the other singers would respect. I also tried to have fairly equal numbers of male and female leaders.

Next was choosing the members of each ensemble, which was done by the leaders choosing the members (privately, in my office), much like choosing up sides in sports. There were rules, however:
– no discussions of what happened inside the room (no one should know that they were the last chosen . . . or perhaps in today's lingo, "The first rule about ensemble club is you do not talk about ensemble club")
– they drew slips to see the order of first choice, so that was random. For the next round, those who chose last got first choice on the next round. If there was an SSATB ensemble, I tried to give someone who needed two sopranos an early choice. We worked one part at a time, sopranos, then altos, etc.)
– if several people wanted the same singer, I’d decide who prevailed. Then whoever “lost” would get the nod the next time
– they sometimes needed advice, since they might not know each singer’s voice. I provided this and singers sometimes chimed in, too
– I was always cognizant of keeping ensembles well-balanced in terms of size of voice: in a one-on-a-part ensemble, three big voices and one small one would only lead to frustration in trying to balance

This process worked well and there were remarkably few disagreements.

Next was choosing repertoire: we had a collection of madrigal books in the library and the vocal jazz library was available (later, when we had a vocal jazz ensemble again, the vocal jazz director would help as well). Leaders presented possibilities to their ensemble, then the ensemble voted on what they wanted to do. They had to bring choices to me and if two ensembles picked the same piece, first to me got the nod—this helped keep them from procrastinating.

 
Over time I loosened the rules slightly, so they didn't have to stay strictly with madrigals–19th century part-songs and any other repertoire that I felt really worked as an one-on-a-part ensemble piece could be included. Somewhat the same with vocal jazz–there was latitude, but they had to have it approved.

I supplied them with a handout about how to work in rehearsal, the importance of getting notes learned quickly (practice them outside rehearsal!) so they could work on musical/expressive issues right away and not at the last minute. The importance of doing a one-on-a-part ensemble is that everyone is totally responsible for his or her own part—no one else can cover for you! (We very occasionally had someone ill enough that they couldn’t sing—on at least one occasion I jumped in to cover a part, but luckily this was rare).

When they began rehearsing, I’d rotate around to their rehearsals (they were mostly in practice rooms) to see how they were doing. I told them I wouldn’t interrupt, but just observe, unless they wanted help with something. It was great fun for me to watch and see my students in a different light.

I also had to begin working on the program order at this time. I knew the pieces they were doing, the mood, and what keys they were in. Each ensemble sang one piece on each half, their vocal jazz piece on one half and the madrigal on the other. On each half I always alternated" jazz" with a "madrigal." Essentially, I tried to create a concert that would flow well. I also knew which ensembles were doing particularly well, so tried to get them towards the ends of each half to make sure the final few pieces were strongest. I've put the program for the last year I did this at the end of the blog.

Finally I also made it a rule that they had to be in the concert hall listening to the other ensembles, leaving to get ready only one ensemble before they were to go on. That meant they got to hear one another, which was the point, too (early on some ensembles wanted to wait backstage to warm-up more or rehearse—uh-uh!).

This was a fun way to solve what I perceived as weaknesses in our program.

Let us know if you've done something similar or used other ways to broaden your singers’ experience in choir!

 

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Richard Sparks says

    October 25, 2012 at 12:28 pm

    Thanks, Carl. Yes, I think your approach should work well with 9th graders. It’s a great idea to use some singers as models for the others to increase both interest and a sense of what’s possible. Repertoire choices will be important, of course, so they’re challenging, but within the ability of the students–and unlike what I did at the college level, you’d need to assign the pieces. Let me know how it works!
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  2. Carl J Ferrara says

    October 25, 2012 at 10:49 am

    That’s a great idea. I want to try something like this with my 9th grade group. Perhaps I can start with listening to the chorus music in small groups. I can start with the most skilled singers one on a part, to demonstrate, then let the weaker singers build on that. Can’t wait to try it. Thanks for writing!
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