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treble choir

One from the Folder: Weekly Repertoire Thoughts for Women’s/Treble Choirs

April 6, 2018 by Shelbie L. Wahl-Fouts Leave a Comment

Week 3: Friday, April 6, 2018

“Breakable” by Jenni Brandon
Text by Annabelle Moseley
SA, piano

My intermediate college group* is singing this in our next concert, and they have fallen in love with it. (*small ensemble, all non-majors, rehearses ~90min/week. Many have some performance experience before joining, but not all.)

The 2-part nature of the piece makes it musically accessible for a wide range of singers, while still providing room for growth, and incorporates subject matter that speaks to students of all levels. In her composer’s notes, Jenni Brandon remarks that Annabelle Mosley’s poem “tells a powerful story that strength and beauty can be found in all things, and in all of us.” This is an increasingly important message for our singers, no matter their age or grade level. There is also joy (and purposeful representation) in programming a piece by a living woman composer, who is setting a text by a living woman poet.

Most of the work is homophonic and homorhythmic – with both voice parts moving in vertical harmony, without requiring rhythmic part independence. There are some brief points of imitation, contained within the context of a phrase or page. One short aleatoric segment directs the performers to repeat a 4-note pattern in an unmetered fashion, allowing singers to experience individual moments of freedom and creativity, within clear guidelines.

Dynamics and style markings are plentiful, giving the ensemble ample opportunity for musicality and shaping.

Key structure and tonality changes throughout the piece; teaching via solfege would be a difficult prospect. However, the piano accompaniment is independently supportive of the key and of the voice parts, without doubling.

Meter varies from simple meter to compound and back, and incorporates a number of signatures (4/4, 3/4, 2/4, 5/4; 9/8, 6/8, 12/8). The piece does not feel “mixed meter” though – there are clear distinctions between simple and compound sections of the work, with the beat and beat division staying constant within each larger section. Simple: rhythms are primarily beat and beat division (quarter/half/paired eighth), with no syncopation. Compound: rhythms include dotted quarters, sets of 3 eighths, ties, and borrowed duplets. In our first rehearsal, we spent some quality time feeling simple vs. compound, duplets vs. triplets, and what borrowing meant. After that introduction, the rhythms did not feel overly difficult, even for students who are not strong rhyming readers yet, since the text setting matches well with the rhythms, and both voice parts moving together rhythmically for the majority of the piece. 

Title:Breakable
Composer:Jenni Brandon (www.jennibrandon.com)
Date of Composition:2016
Text Source/Author:Annabelle Moseley (www.annabellemoseley.com)
Date of Text:2011
Subject(s):Strength, inner beauty, perseverance, journeys
Listed Voicing:SA
Voicing Details:Primarily 2-pt, occasional unison, no additional divisi
Ranges:S: C4-Gb5 (tessitura: G4-Eb5)
A: A3-C5 (tessitura: C4-C5)
Comfortable ranges and tessitura
Accompaniment:Piano
Duration:~4.5 minutes
Tempo:~66-72, with accel, rit, fermata
Commissioning Ensemble:2015-2016 Women’s Commissioning Consortium, from Graphite Publishing. (Included middle school, high school, college, and community ensembles)
Publisher:Graphite Publishing (www.graphitepublishing.com)
Further descriptions and details, including composer’s notes, audio, perusal score, and purchasing:
http://jennibrandon.com/product/breakable-sa-choir-piano
https://www.graphitepublishing.com/product/breakable/ 

Until next week!
-Shelbie Wahl-Fouts


Dr. Shelbie Wahl-Fouts is associate professor of music, Director of Choral Activities, and music department chair at Hollins University, in Roanoke, Virginia.
Email: Bio:     https://www.hollins.edu/directory/shelbie-wahl-fouts/

For a listing of all current and past blog entries by this author, click here.
For a spreadsheet of all blog posts and their repertoire, click here.

 

Filed Under: One From the Folder, Treble Choirs, Women's Choirs Tagged With: Jenni Brandon, SA, SSA, treble choir, Women's Chorus

One from the Folder: Weekly Repertoire Thoughts for Women’s/Treble Choirs

March 30, 2018 by Shelbie L. Wahl-Fouts Leave a Comment

Week 2: Friday, March 30, 2018

Hello and welcome back to the second installment of my weekly Women’s/Treble Chorus blog, here on Choralnet.org!

Last week, I focused on What is a women’s/treble choir? Who sings in a women’s/treble choir? Why?.

This week, I’d like to continue with that introduction, looking at the challenges conductors often face when programming for women’s/treble choirs, and how we can both acknowledge and overcome those obstacles.

Starting in April, I plan to introduce a new repertoire selection with each post – focusing on subject matter, composer background, text source/author background, range, voicing, harmonic structure, form, rhythmic components, line independence, and more. I’ll walk through the piece, noting teaching strategies and pointing out potential challenges. It is my hope that this blog can serve as a resource for conductors as we program repertoire for our women’s/treble choirs.

Searching for Repertoire? (Getting mixed in with Children’s Choir)

On JWPepper and other music purchasing sites, the voicing lists now often read “Treble Choir” and “Tenor-Bass Choir,” in addition to Unison/Two-part, SAB/Three-Part Mixed, and SATB, etc. This Treble designation is beautifully inclusive when referring to the singers who make up a given ensemble, but can be tricky when referring specifically to the repertoire. On paper (or on screen), the distinction between children’s choir and non-children’s choir music is now even more murky than before.

That’s not to say that children’s choirs can’t perform repertoire for older treble voices, and that older treble choirs can’t perform repertoire originally for children’s choir. Some material can absolutely cross over. But some material may be too mature for a children’s choir, or too childish for an older treble choir. Subject matter, text, ranges, tessitura, voicing, and accompaniment are just a few of the points to consider when trying to decide what repertoire might be good for your particular ensemble.

Why can programming for a women’s/treble (W/T) choir feel challenging?

Beyond the thoughts mentioned above and last week, there are a number of other points to consider that may make choosing rep for a W/T ensemble seem more challenging than for your mixed ensembles.

If you are a tenor or bass, you likely did not have the opportunity to sing in a W/T choir, except perhaps as a children’s choir member when you were younger. If you are a soprano or alto, and were music ed or music performance in school, you likely sang in the top mixed ensemble, and/or continue to sing in mixed ensembles now (symphony chorus, church, community). Either way, many of us who were music ed or performance majors may have had limited experience with W/T repertoire from a performer’s point of view. Since we as conductors often program works that we loved as performers, this lack of personal performance experience in W/T ensembles can be a missing resource when we look for music to use in our W/T choirs.

If you went to school for choral music ed or choral conducting, especially in a graduate program, your choral literature classes most likely focused on SATB rep, and thus contained very few works for women’s voices or treble choir. Those same lit classes (and music history classes) likely included very few works by women composers, of any voicing or genre. While some programs (though not enough!) are consciously attempting to cast a wider net in terms of what to teach their undergrad and graduate students, (i.e. including composers of other genders, races, ethnicities, nationalities, religions, and political backgrounds in the course content), these changes can take quite a while to work their way through the system, and do not generally affect those of us who may have already missed this information when we were in school.

Historical works for W/T choirs are legitimately more difficult to find in the published realm, primarily due to the political, religious, institutional, and systemic bias against women (as performers, conductors, and composers, and so too just as humans). W/T ensembles absolutely existed, but, just like the women themselves, were far less likely to be seen, heard, and valued than their mixed choir or men’s/boy’s choir counterparts. In turn, that means the music written for W/T ensembles was less valued as well, and less likely to be kept, archived, published, and distributed.

This point is even more true if you are looking for works for W/T ensembles written by women composers. Women composers historically were not afforded the same professional standing as men (for many of the same political, religious, institutional, and systemic reasons). With the exception of a few well-known or well-connected women with privileged family or religious visibility, compositional output by women composers was also less likely to be valued (kept, archived, published, and distributed), than that of their male counterparts. That’s not to say women composers didn’t exist, and that works (by composers of any gender) for W/T voices didn’t exist – but finding them takes more work and more research on the part of the conductor.

There is a great deal of re-voiced repertoire out there – selections originally written for SATB choirs and re-worked for treble voices. Some of these arrangements or transcriptions are wonderful – in that they allow our treble singers to experience composers or styles that they might not otherwise have access to. However, many of these arrangements/transcriptions have complications with tessitura, range, and voice leading, which can make them a pedagogical minefield. Figuring out which re-voiced selections may work for our ensembles, and which won’t, takes time and research on the part of the conductor.

Perhaps more at issue though is the idea of programming works originally intended for mixed, men’s, or children’s voices, as opposed to the literal and figurative voices of women. Visibility and representation are important. If we limit our W/T selections primarily to re-packaged SATB, TTBB, or children’s repertoire, we are also limiting the visibility and representation of women’s voices – both to our audience and to our singers.

New works for W/T choirs are regularly commissioned by community, high school, and collegiate ensembles. And many of these additions to the W/T genre are amazing. But, unfortunately, this repertoire frequently can be a touch too difficult for an intermediate or advanced-but-small W/T group. So, you may go to a conference and hear a great song with a perfect text, but it calls for more divisi than your group can manage, or more independent voice lines than your students are ready to tackle. This can feel disheartening – to finally find something you think will speak to your ensemble, but then realize it may not be at the right level for them just yet.

Often, programming quality repertoire for our women’s/treble choirs can sometimes seem a daunting task. However, my hope is that through this blog you might find both individual selections and general resources that speak to your ensembles and their skill sets, and expand your knowledge of available repertoire. Next week, I’ll start introducing one song each each week. In the meantime, I encourage you to review the resources from last week’s post, focusing on repertoire for women’s/treble choirs and/or works by women composers.

Until next week!
-Shelbie Wahl-Fouts


Dr. Shelbie Wahl-Fouts is associate professor of music, Director of Choral Activities, and music department chair at Hollins University, a women’s college in Roanoke, Virginia.
Email: Bio:     https://www.hollins.edu/directory/shelbie-wahl-fouts/

 

 

SELECTED RESOURCES, Part 2 (See Week 1 for the start of this resource list)

MUSE Cincinnati’s Women’s Choir (Jillian Harrison-Jones, artistic director)
https://www.musechoir.org/music

Peninsula Women’s Chorus (Martín Benvenuto, artistic director)
http://www.pwchorus.org/?q=pwc/repertoire

Aurora Chorus (Joan Szymko, artistic director)
http://www.aurorachorus.org/index.php/repertoire/

Cornell University Chorus (Robert Isaacs, conductor)
http://cuchorus.com/repertoire/

St. Mary’s College Women’s Choir (Nancy Menk, conductor)
https://www.saintmarys.edu/academics/departments/music/womens-choir#Recordings%20and%20CD%20orders

Oklahoma All-State Treble Rep List
http://okmea.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/All-State-Treble-Repertoire.xls

Tennessee All-State Women’s Chorale Rep List
http://www.tnmea.com/SSAA_Rep.aspx

Empowering Silenced Voices Database For Socially Conscious Choral Music (Jeremiah Selvey & Chorosynthesis)
http://chorosynthesis.org/esvdatabase/

Sacred Renaissance Choral Music for Women’s Choirs: An Annotated Repertoire List of Music from Italy and Spain (Kathryn Kelly Longo) https://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/1178

Filed Under: One From the Folder, Treble Choirs, Women's Choirs Tagged With: SSA, treble choir, treble chorus, women's choir, Women's Chorus

One from the Folder: Weekly Repertoire Thoughts for Women’s/Treble Choirs

March 23, 2018 by Shelbie L. Wahl-Fouts 1 Comment

Week 1: Friday, March 23, 2018

Hello and welcome to the first installment of my weekly Women’s/Treble Chorus blog, here on Choralnet.org!

Starting in April, I plan to introduce a new repertoire selection with each post – focusing on subject matter, composer background, text source/author background, range, voicing, harmonic structure, form, rhythmic components, line independence, and more. I’ll walk through the piece, noting teaching strategies and pointing out potential challenges. It is my hope that this blog can serve as a resource for conductors as we program repertoire for our women’s/treble choirs.

This week and next, I’d like to delve just a bit into women’s/treble choirs as a genre, and what obstacles conductors might face in searching for repertoire.

What is a women’s/treble choir? Who sings in a women’s/treble choir? Why?

Until fairly recently, “treble choir” usually referred to children’s choirs, while “women’s chorus” referred to groups of high school or college women, or adult women in community ensembles. As our terminology has (thankfully!) grown to be more inclusive of non-binary singers, transgender singers, and those who do not identify as women, the naming aspect of women’s/treble choirs has made things a bit fuzzy.

When choosing repertoire, it’s important first to know who is in your ensemble, and how they came to be there, and why. The focus on the how and the why in particular are exceptionally important in making sure your repertoire choices help bolster the spirit and community of the ensemble, while also continuing to move the needle forward in musicality and technical skill.

There are many reasons a group of sopranos and altos may come together to sing, some of which are directly related to their self-identification as women, and some having nothing to do with self-identification beyond voice part.

One such ensemble may be an adult community choir (professional or volunteer), whose focus often (though not exclusively) includes feminism, LGBTQIA concerns, domestic violence, racial inequality, and broader themes of a social justice nature. These groups were often originally “women’s choirs” – to provide women with a space to come together as women, and make music together. While many of these community ensembles have embraced singers who do not strictly identify as women, the word “women” is often still used in the group’s name or bylaws, as a tie to the historic nature of women choosing to sing together in community.

Or, you may have a school-aged choir (of middle school, high school, or college level) who sing together as the second-tier group – i.e. the SAs who auditioned for the top mixed chamber group and didn’t make it. This kind of ensemble is often less about personal identity, and more about the fact that there aren’t enough tenors/basses to balance the number of sopranos/altos in a given program.

Another group may be students who sing together as a non-auditioned or auditioned treble ensemble, as part of the pedagogical design of a given choral program. These ensembles often have a tenor/bass counterpart ensemble, where SAs and TBs work separately on repertoire, vocal technique, and ensemble skills that fit the age and vocal skills of the students, and who may then come together to perform mixed repertoire, as well as SA and TB rep in the same term. Groups in this type of program frequently have an identity as a unit (i.e. women’s chorus or men’s chorus), but that identity is more about who they rehearse and spend time with (sopranos/altos/trebles, tenors/basses), and less about specifically being a women’s choir as based in gender.

There are also programs in which the auditioned SA ensemble is the top ensemble. This may be by institutional design (i.e. an all-girls school, or a women’s college). But, this scenario also occurs at traditional co-ed schools, where the director has chosen to make their flagship choir an SA ensemble – focusing the added responsibilities, additional performance opportunities, and higher difficulty of music on the auditioned soprano and alto students. In this case, the identity is often about being the “top choir,” rather than being specifically a “women’s choir,” though that distinction can vary by school and by director.

And then there are those who are together by (happy?) accident. Often, this is an auditioned mixed chamber ensemble at a smaller school, which one semester happens to not have any tenors or basses. So the auditioned mixed group unexpectedly becomes an auditioned treble group by happenstance.

In the grand scheme of things, programming quality repertoire for a women’s/treble choir can sometimes seem a daunting task. However, my hope is that through this blog you might find both individual selections and general resources that speak to your ensembles and their skill sets, and expand your knowledge of available repertoire. Next week, I’ll talk specifically about the challenges we face as conductors when programming for women’s/treble ensembles. And then in April, I’ll start introducing one song each each week. In the meantime, I encourage you to review these resources below focusing on repertoire for women’s/treble choirs and/or works by women composers.

Until next week!
-Shelbie Wahl-Fouts

———————————————————————

Dr. Shelbie Wahl-Fouts is associate professor of music, Director of Choral Activities, and music department chair at Hollins University, a women’s college in Roanoke, Virginia.
Email: Bio:      https://www.hollins.edu/directory/shelbie-wahl-fouts/

 

SELECTED RESOURCES

ACDA Women’s Chorus Repertoire & Resources
https://acda.org/ACDA/Repertoire_and_Resources/Repertoire_Specific/Women_s_Choir.aspx

Conducting Women’s Choirs (Debra Spurgeon, editor)
https://www.giamusic.com/store/resource/conducting-womens-choirs-book-with-companion-dvd-book-g8367

Wisdom, Wit, and Will: Women Choral Conductors on Their Art (Joan Conlon, editor)
https://www.giamusic.com/store/resource/wisdom-wit-and-will-book-g7590

By Women, For Women: Choral Works for Women’s Voices Composed and Texted by Women (Shelbie Wahl-Fouts)
https://tinyurl.com/ydeyuyk8

unCONVENTional Restoration: Giving Voice to the Silenced (Meredith Bowen)
http://acda.org/files/choral_journals/BowenFeb18.pdf

Choral Works by Women Composers (Eliza Rubenstein and Magen Solomon)
http://womencomposers.ocwomenschorus.org

Concentus Women’s Chorus (Edna Yeh and Gwendolyn Gassler, artistic directors)
http://www.concentus.org/repertoire

Elektra Women’s Choir (Morna Edmundson, artistic director)
https://elektra.ca/repertoire/

Grand Rapids Women’s Chorus (Lori Tennenhouse, artistic director)
https://grwc.org/repertoire/

Mirabai Women’s Chorus (Sandra Snow, artistic director)
https://www.singmirabai.org/music/

Orange County Women’s Chorus (Eliza Rubenstein, artistic director)
http://www.ocwomenschorus.org/repertoire

Vox Femina: Los Angeles (Iris Levine, artistic director)
http://www.voxfemina.org/music

 

Filed Under: One From the Folder, Treble Choirs, Women's Choirs Tagged With: SSA, treble choir, treble chorus, women's choirs, Women's Chorus

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