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Southern Exposure, Missouri Southern State Univ.
Southern Exposure, Missouri Southern State Univ.
 
Composers getting proactive
We designed ChoralNet Communities flexibly in order to permit ChoralNet users to create their own ways of communicating. The community Composers of Choral Music has been very active, perhaps because there isn't any other established forum for such composers to get together.
 
Their latest project is a Composition Showcase. When you go into a music store and rifle through stacks of octavos, you get to look at a lot of pieces in one place. But looking at composer websites is a much more tedious business, because they're all different. The Showcase is intended to be an opportunity to look at a lot of pieces in one place. All the pieces have sample pages in PDF format.
 
You'll still have to go to each composer's page individually (or send them an email or something) if you want to buy their pieces, so it doesn't have the one-stop-shopping convenience of a music store (yet), but it's a good first step. 
 
I make it a point to include a lot of 21st-century music in my
Choral Caffeine: Listening at a Conference
Attending an ACDA Conference is a little like trying to drink from a fire-hose.  There’s a whole lot coming at you in a big ol' hurry.  The trick is to quench your thirst without getting soaked.
 
In her Choral Journal article, “Conferences 101: How to Listen, Absorb, and Process the Conference Experience,” Susan Davenport discusses how to make the most of the musical feast placed before us.
 
"One of the greatest benefits in attending conferences is hearing new literature. Yet, listeners must hear in a specific way if they are to learn the most from what they are hearing. Choral methods professors have proposed many useful lists of criteria for selecting literature for choirs,  and those same criteria are equally valuable when listening at a conference. Since, over the course of the two or three days, one will hear many pieces of music, listening must be systematic. In ‘Choral Music: Methods and Materials’ Barbara Brinson identifies certain factors
How's your low range?

A record company has begun a worldwide search for the singer who can sing a note so low that it is thought never to have been sung before.

Written by Military Wives composer Paul Mealor, the choral work De Profundis includes a low E, which lies more than two octaves below middle C.

C'mon, you know you can do it! A few shots of vodka, and no problem.

Stuff Presbyterians Say
It is Sunday, so this is for the church musicians:
Free seating chart software
For people like me who are too stingy to buy software (and particularly suspicious of sites which require a monthly fee for eternity), we're always on the lookout for freebies. One of the needs of choral directors is to make seating charts, and periodically there's a request on the forums for computer-based solutions to address this.
 
I use a Word clone to make charts, but a UK-based group, the Monday Mondays, decided to make their own, JavaScript-based one. It's free for anybody to use.
It's a little clunky, but hey, it's free.
 
Pros:
  • Reasonably intuitive to use: click on a name, then click where you want it to go (can't drag). Entering the names in the first place is kind of a pain, but that's true for any system. Fast.
  • Flexible section names (in case you have baritenors or other "transsectionals")
  • Switch two singers' seats easily (something hard to do in Word)
  • Move groups of singers at once (for example to add a singer in the middle)
  • Browser-based; print directly from browser (a mixed blessing)
Sent from where?
Bob Eaton, president of ACDA's Eastern Division, gives us this juxtaposition of choral music and technology:
 
I received an email and in place of the typical "sent from my iPhone, or Android or whatever" statement it said:
 
"Sent from choir rehearsal."
 
A student?
 
A choir member?
 
No... The choir director!
Super Bowl a cappella
This ad, scheduled for this Sunday's Super Bowl, features a cappella singing:
 
 
For the embedded-impaired: http://youtu.be/U38jELwi0lE
 
 
P.S. Happy Candlemas!
Stuff Choirs Say
In case you've missed it:
 
 
Choral Caffeine: Getting to the Conference
Given that the first of ACDA’s seven Divisional Conferences kicks off next week in Madison, Wisconsin, it seems a good time to share a few helpful hints for those journeying to one of these grand events.  (You ARE planning to attend your ACDA Divisional Conference, aren’t you? You can still register.)
 
To help with some of the financial concerns, ACDA has provided a detailed discussion for seeking funding from your school or church.  There is also a sample letter available to help you reach out to your superiors.
 
The Choral Journal article “Money, Motels, Music and More: A Convention Primer” has a few additional helpful hints for those who might be new to the Conference environment:
 
<> Arrive well-rested. We don't get much sleep at ACDA Conferences.
 
<> Don’t be shy about reading those name tags.  You could be sharing the elevator with Eric Whitacre or Tim Sharp.
 
<> Arrive early for concerts. They're usually packed.
UK Conductor Seeks to Protect Historic Buildings
By Lawrence Poole
 
WENDOVER, BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, UK -- A MUSICAL director from Great Missenden has organised a series of concerts to highlight the threat that construction work for HS2 poses to historic buildings and churches.  
 
Peter Bassano, 66, of Potter Row, said: "One of my jobs is as musical director of the Wendover Choral Society and many of the concerts we perform are in St.
Mary's Church, Wendover, which is a few hundred yards from the proposed route. If it goes ahead the noise will be tremendous and we will no longer be able to perform concerts. You need moments of silence to perform serious works."
 
bassano1.jpg
 
 
Jessica Nicholson Puts the Cool in Chorus
By Jim Welte
 
MILL VALLEY, CA -- When Jessica Nicholson began creating a choral music program in the Mill Valley School District in 2000, she had two related but distinct challenges.  The first was a simple question with a not-so-simple answer: What’s choral music?

 

“It’s a vocal ensemble, a team activity where you learn a variety of repertoire of different musical styles, where you get musical instruction as part of a group and then you get a chance to perform outside of school,” Nicholson explains, summarizing her “elevator pitch.” She’s given that pitch countless times over the years as she’s built the district’s choral music program from scratch into a juggernaut that includes some 450 students.

 
'Mr. O Canada' joins choir as new musical director
By Alex Browne
 
WHITE ROCK, BC -- The Peninsula-based Pacific Showtime Men’s Chorus has started a new year with a new musical director – none other than Mr. O Canada himself, Mark Donnelly.
Donnelly-Mark.jpg

The famed anthem singer, opera singer, voice teacher and leader of classical vocal ensembles replaces the group’s well-respected former director, Gareth Evans, who retired at the end of last year.

“We’re very pleased that Mark agreed to join us,” said chorus president Leigh Anderson. “Mark has been out to two rehearsals so far – bringing two of his sons, who are great singers themselves – and he’s already introduced a new song to us.”

 
Madonna Halftime Show a 'Fabulous' Experience for Choir
By Erin Murphy
 
INDIANAPOLIS -- Along with the Indianapolis Children's Choir, which joined Kelly Clarkson in for the national anthem before the big game Sunday, local performers were also featured prominently during the elaborate halftime show. Drummers from four local marching bands and singers from the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir took the stage with Madonna.

For the dozens of singers with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir it was a performance of a lifetime, singing with Madonna during the Super Bowl halftime show.

“Nothing compared to actually being on the field for the show itself,” said Dana Luetzelschwab-Voigt a singer with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir. “I thought I had finally gotten over being star-struck and being amazed at everything that’s being done, then I was on the field and I was a kid. I was a kid again.”

 
In Love With Barbershop
By Sara Cunningham
 
LOUISVILLE -- The small, white church-turned-rehearsal-hall was filled last week with the same bright, cheery sound that has made the Thoroughbred Chorus such a beloved Louisville institution but with one fairly big difference — there was a new face front and center, leading the talented group.

Montreal native and Old Louisville resident Andrew Wheaton, 26, was chosen by the Thoroughbred’s board of directors Jan. 19 after an extensive search, said Eric Hunstiger, the group’s president.

“I’m just so in love with barbershop and I want to be a part of bringing good barbershop to anyone who will listen,” Wheaton said midway through his first rehearsal as director.