J W Pepper
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Warwickshire Boys Choir
Warwickshire Boys Choir (Flickr photo by Iron Man Records)
 
Choral Caffeine: Selecting an Edition
The academic year is winding down; for some, it’s already in the history books.  You soon get to take a well-deserved break from the daily grind.
 
However, for most of us it doesn’t take too long before our brains start thinking about the next season.  Among the myriad details you will probably ponder while mowing the grass is the all-important matter of repertoire.   If you are pondering a masterwork for next season (and if not, WHY not?), you might want to consider the choice of performing edition along with simply selecting a piece.
 
In his article, “The Edition You Chose Matters” (Southern Harmony, Vol.27, No.2), Lee Barrow gives this matter a thoughtful airing.
 
How does one determine which edition to use? The first step is to examine available scores. If possible, compare two or more editions of the same work, measure by measure. What differences exist? Does an edition use words such as arranged, adapted, based on, setting by or
ACDA to Publish International Journal of Research in Choral Singing (IJRCS)

The American Choral Directors Association is honored to announce it is now the publisher of the International Journal of Research in Choral Singing (IJRCS), adding this distinguished research journal to its existing suite of choral publications. Adding IJRCS to ACDA’s supporting cast of online resources and research publications is a partial fulfillment of one of the initiatives outlined for ACDA in 2008: “I envision a twenty-first century ACDA that sets the research and publication agenda for the best thinking, past and present, in choral music."

 
In its first issue, IJRCS editor Dr. James Daugherty said that the International Journal of Research in Choral Singing “celebrates the uniquely relational character of choral singing by publishing research that contributes to our understanding of choral ensemble practice and pedagogy.” Specifically, IJRCS promotes studies of ensemble singing, choir sound, choral pedagogy, and related areas that employ rigorous,

Plus ça change...
In case anyone tells you that the exclusion of music from the list of "real" academic subjects is a new invention, here's a quote from Roman philosopher Seneca:
And what of those who are engaged in composing, hearing, and learning songs, while they twist the voice, whose best and simplest movement Nature designed to be straightforward, into the meanderings of some indolent tune, who are always snapping their fingers as they beat time to some song they have in their head, who are overheard humming a tune when they have been summoned to serious, often even melancholy, matters? These have not leisure, but idle occupation.
Writing on Joanne Jacobs' excellent education blog, Diane Senechal has her high-school students read this letter from Seneca (which also condemns such frivolous activities as chess, sunbathing, spectator sports, and getting one's hair cut) as a starting point for classroom discussion about such activities as Facebook and texting.
Audience awareness
I mentioned in my last post that we as conductors face away from the audience, but I always feel like I'm aware of them anyway, even if I can't see them. Somehow I sense whether they're attentive, and how they're responding to the music. Part of it is obviously that there's more ambient noise (rustling, coughing) if people are bored, and some of it is indirect response via the singers' expressions (even though they're undoubtedly [ahem] all watching the conductor at all times) but I feel like there's some psychic connection also.
 
Others have this sense as well?
 
**
 
There's an annular eclipse of the sun today, right after my performance! I'll wear some eclipse viewing glasses (thoughtfully provided by my alma mater) at some point in the performance, although they're so dark I won't be able to see anything. That'll be incentive to get my score memorized.
Creative Ventures into Music Publishing
I'm thrilled to see all of these new ventures into music publishing.  Today I am featuring Kansas City Music Publishing.
 
In case you are new to ChoralNet, we talk about music publishing often on this blog.  Here are some of the articles from the past:
 
With that in mind, I got this email the other day - it sounds like a company that believes in many of the values we've espoused here over the past few years:
 
My name is Jacob Narverud (jacob@kcmusicpublishing.co). I am the President of Kansas City Music Publishing Co., a new all-digital publishing company in Kansas City. (www.kcmusicpublishing.co)

Here is some information about the company:

BENEFITS FOR THE CONDUCTOR:
-No shipping costs
Dress rehearsal
Just finished dress rehearsal with the orchestra last night for Haydn's Mass in Time of War (aside: first time I've ever had to tell a tympanist to play louder, but it is a prominent part). 
 
I always find dress rehearsal to be much more stressful than performances. That's the real deadline for knowing your score cold, and there are many more choices to make. That's when the string players will ask why there's a slur in the violin I part and not in the violin II part, and whether we should make them conform. If there's a minor mistake (such as a ragged cutoff), I have to do triage: is this worth stopping for? If not, do I need to remember it until the next stopping place? I always find that every time we stop I've accumulated a half dozen things to say, and having to keep track of that list consumes bandwidth. 
 
Of course, this applies to regular rehearsals, too. But you get more chances in regular rehearsals; the time factor isn't as pressing, and having the orchestra
What is the best way to leave the profession?
I've noted with respect the way LSU has said goodbye to longtime professor Ken Fulton as he retires this year.  They've celebrated his tenure with ceremony and class.  LSU also included him on the search committee to choose a new conductor.
 
It doesn't always go that way, does it?
 
Sometimes there is no celebration and little recognition.  
 
LSU did it right.  A hearty congratulations to their administration, alumni, and students.
 
Ken, congratulations on a job well done.
Seen on Twitter lately
I run a constant search for the word "choral" on twitter.  Occasionally, I look to see what it brings up.
 
Here are some of the latest:
 
  • My choral teacher put my in between the two skinniest girls in school for this concert tonight soo basically I'm gonna look like a whale
  • U of L Cardinal Singers bound for Cuba 'choral summit': The summit will be a cross-cultural exchange of US and C... http://t.co/Eu5zGRyM
  • Nothing calms me down after an awful shift at work more than choral music by @EricWhitacre
  • seriously considering dropping out of the choral department.
Interesting, eh?
How Do You Measure a Year in the Choral Life?
In the musical Rent, Seasons of Love asks “how do you measure a year in the life?” The clinical way of doing so sounds something like “Five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes”, but the song rhetorically asks, how do you really measure a year in the life?
 
Most of us are completing a year of choral performance, and in various ways, we are called to measure it. For the American Choral Directors Association, I measure activity in members, conferences, budget measurements, programs, and methods of participation and engagement. With those measurements, something similar to “Five hundred twenty-five thousand, six hundred” is likely to appear. But after all the calculations, I am still left with the profound question in my artistic endeavors, “how do I really measure this year?”
 
If I try to apply math to the performances I have with the Tulsa Oratorio Chorus, I suppose I could count the measures or notes in the Bach motets, cantatas, Magnificat
Mix My Part
I got this email about a new service:
 
I developed an online based software solution for choirs to improve the rate at which they can learn repertoire. The software provides an online multitrack mixer/player and media hosting hub so a teacher/director can prepare recordings of individual voice and instrumental parts and post them for playback by choir or band members very much like a YouTube video so they can be used to practice and sing along at home while controlling each part independently while they all play at the same time. I don't want to burden you with too lengthy an explanation if it doesn't interest you, but maybe you'd like to visit the website and see what my new creation can do.
 
The website is http://www.mixmypart.com and right there on the home page is a button that says "Launch Demo" which will launch a working version of the software and a sample song. The nice thing about this solution for choir members, is that they would receive an encoded link just
Choral leader brings passion for music to L.A. schools
By Kelsey Sharpe
 
LOS ANGELES -- Public K-12 schools have been in a constant struggle to scrape together funding for music programs, decimated by budget cuts. So you can imagine how surprised a large number of middle and high school teachers were when they found out that their 3,000 students could get professional choral training for a song.

That’s all the payment Rebecca Lord, associate director of choral activities in the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, asks of students in the L.A. area schools who want to participate in the UCLA Choral Outreach Program that is wrapping up its inaugural year in June. 

Lord, who received her Doctorate of Musical Arts in conducting from UCLA in 2011, regularly visits public schools to lead free choral clinics and master classes to train young voices.  Then, as a way of introducing them to the opportunities higher education offers them, Lord brings them to campus to watch choral groups at UCLA in action as they practice and perform.
 
New Seamus Heaney setting to premiere at Harvard
By Spencer Lenfield
 
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- THE SOUND of a Harvard Commencement, for many, is the sound of choirs singing—exposed, organic, human. “To write for voices alone is a great challenge—it’s one of the purest tests of a composer’s craft and ingenuity,” says Richard Beaudoin, preceptor of music. The subtleties of the unaccompanied voice have occupied much of his time and concentration lately: President Drew Faust commissioned Beaudoin to write a setting of Seamus Heaney’s poem “Villanelle for an Anniversary” for this year’s Commencement. The poem was commissioned for the University’s 350th anniversary extravaganza in 1986; its reappearance this year marks the end of commemorating Harvard’s 375th anniversary.
 
“It seemed especially fitting to mark the end of our anniversary celebration by commissioning a work that would draw on the University’s shared history while at the same time creating something new,” Faust wrote in an e-mail.
 
The new choral work will premiere immediately after Heaney himself recites the poem, taking a place among the Latin and English of hymns and anthems used for centuries at Harvard. (Raising the status of the arts at Harvard has been a central theme of Faust’s presidency, and musical interludes have become a Commencement fixture: Wynton Marsalis played "America the Beautiful” on Commencement Day 2009, when he received an honorary degree, and Placido Domingo serenaded fellow honorary degree recipient Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2011.)
 
Unknown college choir tries a new tactic
WOODLAND HILLS, CA -- Students walking along the Mall near the Freudian Sip were greeted Monday with echoes of the Pierce College Choir.  The “flash mob” came following the choir’s performance at the Plaza del Sol Theater at California State University, Northridge.

Members dressed in black tops and blue jeans began to warm up outside of the Student Store at 12:45 p.m.  They attracted the attention of a handful of students that stopped and enjoyed a break from the stress of finals.  Some students even pulled out their cell phones and cameras to capture the moment.

Cathryn Tortell, an adjunct instructor of music, is the director for the choir.  She organized the impromptu free concert with one goal.  “A lot of people don’t even know we exist,” Tortell said. “It was all about we exist.”

The plan worked and attracted the attention of Angela Enriquez, a 19-year-old nursing student.  “I just walked by and saw them setting up,” Enriquez said.

 
 
John S. Long to retire after 38 years
By Nate Ellis
 
PICKERINGTON, OH -- Nearly four decades after inheriting an almost non-existent vocal music program at Pickerington High School, John S. Long hopes to "send them off singing" at his final performance on May 23.

In 38 years of teaching, Long has seen quite a transformation of the Pickerington Local School District and its high school music programs.

In that time, the district has gone from one to two high schools, grown to a districtwide enrollment of approximately 10,400 and he's personally witnessed his vocal music classes blossom from a quiet group of nine students in his first year, to a state-recognized program that now draws about 150 students each year at Pickerington High School Central alone and receives invitations to perform throughout the country.

So it was with a sense of sadness and amazement that Long on May 4 gathered each of his current choir students, from freshmen to seniors, to his classroom to announce he would retire from teaching effective the end of the school day, May 31.

 
 
Tamara Brooks, noted choral conductor, dies

(JTA) – Tamara Brooks, a noted choral conductor, and the wife and musical partner of singer and actor Theodore Bikel, has died.

Brooks, a Julliard-trained pianist and conductor, suffered a heart attack on May 19. She was 70.

Brooks had a distinguished career as a conductor and educator who performed around the world.

Director of Choral Activities at the New England Conservatory (NEC) from 1982 to 2000, she had also served as president and head of the orchestral program of Philadelphia's New School of Music. She was the founder and music director of Sequenza, a professional instrumental ensemble devoted to contemporary music.

Brooks and Bikel met when they worked on two shows about Jewish music for PBS in 1999 and 2000, according to the NEC web site. Brooks became Bikel’s professional as well as life partner, accompanying him on piano in frequent concert tours in the U.S. and overseas.

The couple married in 2008. In 2009, they celebrated Bikel’s 85th birthday with a gala concert at Carnegie Hall featuring other top artists from the folk and Jewish music world.

(pictured: Tamara Brooks and husband, Theo Bikel)