Why does your choir do vocal exercises? How to know what to do when – Sequential Choral Training Exercises and its importance
It’s important to think of the voice as not residing just in the pharynx. Think of the voice as being part of the mind and the body. Vocal exercises should have a reason behind why each and every one is done. For example: Singing a bright “nee-nee-nee” raises a suppressed larynx to a more neutral position. This is especially important to bass singers who find themselves pressing their larynx to sing even lower. Singing a “nee to a nah” brings the sound forward. Vocal exercises should include continuous body movement no matter how small. This increases circulation, enables natural breathing from the diaphragm, and provides oxygen to the brain.
Not only should movement happen, but the brain should be triggered to think about what the ear is hearing and what the voice is singing. Doing activities such as writing your name in the air with an imaginary balloon helps engage the mind. Looking about the room and finding something new about it, engages the mind. Calling out the new found thing and naming it’s shape, color, purpose and if it serves any purpose to you.
How we actually begin making our first sounds is important. Using descending slides to gently pull the vocal folds toward the cricoid ring and back toward the thyroid sets good habits into play.
Helping our singers understand the difference in our articulators (teeth, tongue, mouth, and jaw) that make consonants and resonators that make our vowels therefore our pitch is equally important.
There are 8 steps in the SEQUENTIAL CHORAL TRAINING EXERCISE:
Connect Body and Mind
Alignment
Breath Management
Phonation
Articulators
Tone quality/Timbre
Aural skills
Reading skills
BODY and MIND
Wash car/windows ▪Dig a ditch ▪Swim front/back stroke ▪Swim circles ▪Quick jog ▪Hand off the dance ▪Draw name with balloon
Williams: Happy •https://youtu.be/ZbZSe6N_BXs
Copland: Rodeo (20:11) •https://youtu.be/SNZs82BZ9R8
ALIGNMENT Massage jaw, temples, neck muscles •Yawn and stretch with arms over head then open to side and drop •Shoulders to ears, drop with blades high •Roll up on toes; back on heels; side to side; soften the knees •Drop, hang over feet, roll up one vertebrate at a time as if stacking blocks on top of blocks •Look about the room – freedom to move •Tongue stretches
ACTIVATE DIAPHRAGM / BREATH MANAGEMENT •Choir Shoulder Check – right hand on neighbor’s shoulder, lightly tap if shoulders rise •Measure Air Stream •Silent breath in, out on “ch-ch-ch-ch-ch” •In 4 out 8 – lungs completely emptied (fast stream of air) •In 2 out 12, 16, 20, 24 •In 1 out 16
KEYS: No audible breathing – closed-mouth yawn Keep shoulders down during inhale Keep muscles engaged Keep moving
ARTICULATORS: Mouth, Teeth, Tongue, Jaw
distinguish articulators from resonators:
Others: Bu-tter-fly, bu-tter-fly, bu-tter-fly flew.
Six-ty eight, six-ty eight, six-ty eight-two.
RESONATORS and TIMBRE •Whistle register small [u] through head-mix-chest
•Bright to Dark [ne] using pitches A-C#-E over 8 counts
Reverse Dark to Bright
•“Pepe Le Pew”
Moving Sound Forward: 1. nasal 2. nasal to open 3. open
Breath Energy – use “z” to springboard the air:
AURAL SKILLS ~ PRACTICING AUDIATION
Pitch Matching Teacher calls, students echo; Individual calls, choir echoes; Altos call, sopranos echo, etc.
Audiation Using Curwen Hand Signs: Teacher signs three/four pitches: (“do-re-do”) singers sign & sing pitches
Hearing intonation:Explain that each pitch contains 100 cents; Give “middle E” pitch then gradually move over 10 pulses down a half step (moving 10 cents each pulse)
Divide choir into three or four groups. •All sing an ascending major scale. •On the descending scale, each group stops and sustains one pitch in the scale, creating a major chord, all resolve on cue to do, mi or so. •Use to work on tuning, balancing chords, dynamics, and harmonization.
SIGHT READING: Choose a system and use it everyday. Think methodically – do not leap frog over any steps
Systems that work include:
Sight-Singing for SSA, Crocker & Eilers, Hal Leonard Publishing
Sight-Reading for Success for SA voices, Stevens & McGill, Hal Leonard Publishing
J. Reese Norris: JReeseNorris.com available strictly online
Young Singers Journey Book 1 & 2, Baldwin, Bartle, Beaupre, Hinshaw Music
•Transfer and Recognizing Patterns and Which one is not like the others: Major/minor scale Major/minor arpeggio Major/minor pentascale Repeating patterns
Sing the tune: OLD HUNDRETH, lyrics by Thomas Ken in the key of any new piece you are singing. Soprano line in solfege: so-mi-re-fa-mi-re-do.
REFERENCES
Cooksey, J. M. (1992). Working with adolescent voices. St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House.
Daugherty, J. (2012). Sequence of a Choral Warm-Up. University of Kansas, KS: Science-based voice education course, Department of Music Education and Music Therapy.
Freeman, C. (2014). Sequential Choral Training Exercises for Middle School. The Institute for Healthy Singing.
Hasseman, F. , Jordan, J. (1991). Group vocal technique. Chapel Hill: NC: Hinshaw Music, Inc.
McKinney, J. (1982). The diagnosis and correction of vocal faults: A manual for teachers of singing and for choir directors. Salem, WI: Waveland Press, Inc.
Norris.J.R. (2019). ACDA Interest Session: Unlocking Mystery of the Middle School Men. https://www.jreesenorris.com/resources.html
Shalberg, M. (2019). Breath Management Exercises. Una Vocis Choral Training Exercises.
Stultz, M. (2007). Innocent sounds. Building choral tone and artistry in your children’s choir. 1, 69-78. Fenton, MO: Morning Star.
Stultz, M. (2007). Innocent sounds. Building choral tone and artistry in your children’s choir. 2, 137-144. Fenton, MO: Morning Star.
http://Hymnary.org, Ken, T. (1694). OLD HUNDRETH
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