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Southern Exposure, Missouri Southern State Univ.
Southern Exposure, Missouri Southern State Univ.
 
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.
The Arts Teach

In Elliot Eisner’s book The Arts and the Creation of Mind (2002, Yale University Press), Eisner states, “The arts' position in the school curriculum symbolizes to the young what adults believe is important.” In Chapter 4, What the Arts Teach and How It Shows, Eisner outlines Ten Lessons the arts Teach:

  • The arts teach children to make good judgments about qualitative relationships. Unlike curriculum in which correct answers and rules prevail, in the arts, it is judgment rather than rules that prevail.
  • The arts teach children that problems can have more than one solution and that questions can have more than one answer.
  • The arts celebrate multiple perspectives. One of their large lessons is that there are many ways to see and interpret the world.
  • The arts teach children that in complex forms of problem solving purposes are seldom fixed, but change with circumstance and opportunity. Learning in the arts requires the ability and a willingness to surrender to

Vocal Cords up close while singing
All four parts of a Victoria Kyrie, in very close-up.
 
 
For the embedded-impaired:
Preparing a Concert with Chorus of Over 800
By David Ng
 
LOS ANGELES -- How many performers does it take to pull off Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 8, popularly and dauntingly known as the "Symphony of a Thousand"? The answer isn't as obvious as it appears.

For the Los Angeles Philharmonic, which performs the gargantuan symphony Saturday at the Shrine Auditorium, the tally is 1,011, with a lingering asterisk or two. It marks a rare, but certainly not unique, instance of the symphony being performed on the scale that the composer intended.

The bulging roll call consists of 18 different groups coming together for an unprecedented undertaking by the orchestra: 91 musicians from the L.A Philharmonic, 99 from the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, 813 singers from 16 local choruses and eight vocal soloists.
 
PS22 Inspires Canadian Grassroots Choirs
By Robert Rowat
 
TORONTO -- A viral video featuring PS22, a children’s choir at a New York public school, may be behind the latest phenomena to hit Canada’s vibrant choral music community: the grassroots choir.

A grassroots choir is a group of like-minded people who get together in a casual setting to sing simple arrangements of popular music and singer-songwriter material. Toronto’s Choir!Choir!Choir!, founded in February 2011 by Nobu Adilman and Daveed Goldman, is a shining example.

One inspiration for the grassroots choir movement is PS22, the children’s choir at Public School 22 in Staten Island, New York, directed by Gregg Breinberg. He started blogging about PS22 in 2006 and since then, their videos have been viewed online over 39 million times.

 
Profile: Dr. Jason Bishop
By Cyndie Zahner
 
ERIE, PA -- 'Never underestimate young people," Jason Bishop, Ph.D., often advises. "If we expect great things from them, they begin to expect great things of themselves."

Bishop said it is the greatest lesson he has learned while working as the artistic director for the Young People's Chorus of Erie and as the director of choral activities at Penn State Behrend.

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"What I've learned is that children and young teens are more than ready to make a contribution to the world, if we will just let them," he said.

With that type of attitude, it is easy to understand how Bishop led the YPC of Erie to apply and be accepted into the 2012 World Choir Games to be held from July 4 to 14 in Cincinnati. It is the first time the biennial games, sometimes known as the Choir Olympics, will be held in the United States. The 2010 games were held in China.

 
Craig Hella Johnson in Residence at Univ Wyoming
By David Knight
 
The word reverence perhaps best describes the way in which people talk about famed choral conductor, composer and singer, Craig Hella Johnson.

“He is this human being who is just bigger than life itself and he’s got this awareness of life, of people, of human beings just beyond what we can imagine.” Nicole Lamartine, director of choral activities at the University of Wyoming, said. “When he comes to do music, he dabbles in this thing called music and we partake of who he is.”

Johnson is the UW music department’s Eminent Artist in Residence for the spring semester. His residency started Jan. 30 and will end Feb. 3. During Johnson’s stay at UW, he will conduct clinics and help teach several UW choirs, including the Singing Statesmen and the Bel Canto Women’s Choir.

 
 
 
Therapist Leads Choir, Connects Community
By Candice Marshall
 
SOUTHPORT, AUSTRALIA -- Essentially, the choir uses group singing to increase wellbeing and community connectedness, catching up and rehearsing weekly in Southport.  Music therapist, Angela Delaney, is the choir's conductor.  "People come by word of mouth or they're referred through support services. The people that come along are people that like feeling that they belong somewhere," says Angela.

 

"We've got people from 16 to 62, people from substance abuse rehab, to people that have been in placements in hospital, to community members, to school kids that are not fitting in, all sorts of people."