Thursday, January 27, 2011

Thursday Thoughts

On Tuesday I referred to a book I was reading called "The Swedish Choral Miracle" by the conductor of Pro Coro Canada, Richard Sparks. The book was the result of Sparks' research into the Swedish choral sound as influenced by the world renouned conductor from that country, Eric Ericson.  Early on in the book, Sparks illustrates the six key ingredients which have evolved to make up the spectacular sound of the great choirs in Sweden:    
  • intonationism - the emphasis placed by Swedish conductors on pure intonation
  • pianissim - the emphasis on soft (listening) dynamics
  • non-vibratism - relatively straight tone to improve intonation
  • aliquotism - each singer's attempt for unison with others, ie the relinquishing of one's individual musical personality in favour of the choir's.
  • consentism - the unaminity of ensemble diction
  • precisionism - the emphasis on rhythmic precision
I touched on most of these on Tuesday evening. (Think of "O Crux" - the opening unisons of the S2's, the pp singing, the "ks" consonants of "crux"  and so on. The principle was further illustrated to everyone when I asked the basses to listen to each other in the opening solo line of the Rautavaara "Psalm of Invocation" and make the sound unanimous. There was an instant improvement and everyone heard it.  The challenge for an ensemble like Camerata, not having the luxury of rehearsing numerous times a week, is for us to have the principles of good choral singing as a mental check list throughout each rehearsal. And it begins with listening more than singing.

I thought we made great strides in rehearsal on Tuesday. "O Crux" is really coming along - the music is coming off the page with great conviction. We have a good start on both Rautavaara pieces and the first of the Raminsh set. What will help things go a long way is your spending time with the text. These texts are not like German, Latin, French, etc. They are languages that up to this point, we haven't sung a lot, so it is important to get them in your ears. Please use the online resources which have been provided for you.

In other choir news, the esteemed jury for the Young Composer's Competition met yesterday and made a decision on the winning composition. The jury consisted of Peter Togni, Jeff Hennessy, Christina Murray and myself. There was a lot of discussion over the compositions and I am delighted to tell you that we have a winning composition which I believe will be a fitting addition to the May concert. As the composer has yet to be contacted, I'm not at liberty to tell you his name nor the name of the winning composition but that will be public soon.

Speaking of the May concert, here is a video of a wonderful piece (which we will sing in the May concert) by BC composer Rupert Lang, called "Agneu de Dieu " beautifully sung by musica intima.  Think of this as your own little musical sampler on a day the province has come to a grinding halt with yet another weather system! Hope you like it!



For next week please spend time with the following pieces:

First Snow - Holten
Psalm of Invocation - Rautavaara
Evening Hymn - Rautavaara
Of Home and the Great Wide World - Raminsh
The Black Raven - Raminsh
O Sacrum Convivium - Miskinis
On surri sun rantas - (remember it is the Torma setting)

Have a great week.  See you on Tuesday.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Thursday Thoughts

I went to see the King's Speech last night and if you haven't seen it yet, run to the nearest theatre before it is gone. It's based on historical fact and is brilliantly acted by Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush and a host of others. In reflecting about the movie afterwards, I was thinking of the parallels of King George's huge effort to overcome his speech impediment  and that in our society today, sometimes we are unwilling to put in the effort it will take achieve our individual success.  People have become so ingrained with "instant this and microwaved that," that sometimes we forget the obvious - it takes time, energy and effort.  I expect that most of us realize this as we become older but by then it might be too late. I well remember when I was a young music student, someone said that in order to become a great musician that it took 20% talent and 80% hard work. I'm not sure that this statistic is truly accurate, however the lesson to take away is that you can be extraordinarily gifted but without the work ethic you will achieve little.

So whatthehell does this have to do with such a musically talented group as Camerata and what business do I have waxing poetically on this blog?  I believe that everyone needs to be reminded every now and then, that the success we have achieved is only the result of the individual effort which happens before working as a collective. I see the results of that each week: the women for instance, in the Bo Holten "First Snow." There was no way that you could have sorted out those canonic rhythms in the opening section without first working it out at home.  You sped up the learning process of the piece by weeks just by your individual work and I recognize and commend you for that.

And coming from a board meeting last Monday, it struck me how many committed individuals are working so hard preparing grants, analysing financial reports, taking care of the front of house, working on a financial campaign, preparing data bases, etc., in order to allow us to make music and not worry about the "other stuff."

And then there are you guys who, in addition to preparing these challenging scores week after week, are going the extra mile to look after CD sales, preparing concert programs, helping with languages, web site, setting up for concerts, rehearsing the rep, etc., etc. Thanks to all of you who really do uinderstand that we will only achieve collective success with individual hard work.

Speaking of hard work, I need to give you notes so you can prepare for Tuesday.  Those of you who missed Tuesday, please note that there were 3 new scores which we worked on: Psalm of Invocation (Rautavaara), First Snow (Holten), and the first of the set of Raminsh Slavic folksongs.  The rest of the choir made large leaps in these pieces and you need to prepare accordingly for Tuesday.

Christina and Sean now have the texts which we worked on up on the website. go to the choir only section and one more time: Username: Camerata; Password: HCS1986.
Everyone needs to spend time listening to the texts in order to get the accent and language in your ears.  When you can say the text out loud, then practice speaking the words in rhythm. In addition, please listen to the reference recordings I have collected. Often these are great choirs, and sometimes under the composer's direction. Please make this a goal this week.

Finally, for this Tuesday I will try to get through the following:

O Crux - Nystedt
First Snow - Holten
O Sacrum Convivium - Miskinis (basses correct the rhythm in m. 44 7 46 once and for all!)
Psalm of Invocation - Rautavaara
Evening Hymn - Rautavaara (everyone know the notes)
Three Slavic Folksongs - Raminsh (all three so please spend lots of times on these notes. Basses it wasn't great last week so please prepare accordingly.)

This will be a tough rehearsal as there are lots of new notes this week.  I have two rehearsals left before going away and would like to get through all of these scores before I go away so that Christina and Tristan know where to concentrate their rehearsal time. Lets everyone make the best use of that 80% hard work this Tuesday.

Thanks for wading through this missive. Have a great week!  Oh yeah - check out the website with the new photos Sean put up yesterday.  Impressive group!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Russian IPA for Raminsh #1

Hello all - Christina here.  Below please find the IPA for the Russian text in the first of the three Raminsh Slavic Folk Songs.  Sean will be uploading an mp3 of me speaking this text to the choir-only section of the website in the next few days, along with mp3s for the three Finnish folk songs and the two Rautavaara pieces.

If you have any questions, just drop me an email!

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Thursday Thoughts

It is Wednesday night, the snow is falling down and I am home in hibernating mode but thinking now is the time to jot down my Thursday Thoughts.

First of all, welcome to soprano, Elisabeth Kleven who is replacing Ariane for this concert. We wish Ariane well as she prepares for her board exams in the coming months. Elisabeth is a very talented soprano and will fit in well with the rest of the line up. Please introduce yourselver to her and make her feel at home.

Great rehearsal last night. The music is coming along well (after two rehearsals!) and you have gone from getting the notes off the page to making music in a very short order. The challenge will be to feel so comfortable with the texts that the music sings itself, but that will come with work.

Christina and Sean are working to get the Finnish and Russian texts on the choir only page of the website so stay tuned. It is important for you to spend time with the score in front of you listening to the texts so that you can equate the visual look of words with the sound and accent of the language. That way the next piece we sing in Finnish (or Russian) will be easier from the beginning.

Our annual operation grant application to the Canada Council is finally complete (whew, as he breaths a huge sigh of relief!) and will be in the mail in a couple of days. The workload for this grant app is huge and a number of people with various areas of expertise are involved. It seems that as the choir improves and its level of activity increases, the grant app becomes more complex. Thankfully it is complete for another year!

For next week please spend time with the following scores:
Ave Verum - Raminsh
Benedicto - Sisask
Psalm of Invocation - Rautavara
O Sacrum Convivium - Minisisk
Slavic Folksongs - Raminsh
First Snow - Holten
(I will conduct this in a slow 4 so the women who begin the piece need to have a really secure grasp of the rhythm. Feel the eighth note - sometimes in 3/8 and be aware of the symcops. Spend extra time on this)
Aamulla varhain - arr. Jaako Hulkkonen

Have a great week. See you on Tuesday.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

A Concise Guide To The Choir

(This was sent to me twice tonight, so I thought I'd share it here.  You decide how accurate it is!)

A Concise Guide To The Choir

In any choir or chorus, there are four voice parts: soprano, alto, tenor, and bass.

There are also various other parts such as baritone, countertenor, contralto, mezzo-soprano, etc., but these terms are mostly used by people who are either soloists, or belong to some excessively hotshot classical a cappella group (this applies especially to countertenors), or are trying to make excuses for not really fitting into any of the regular voice parts, so we will ignore them for now.

Each voice part sings in a different range, and each one has a very different personality. You may ask, "Why should singing different notes make people act differently?" Indeed, this is a mysterious question which has not been adequately studied, especially since scientists who study musicians tend to be musicians themselves and have all the peculiar complexes that go with being tenors, French horn players,tympanists, or whatever.

However, this is beside the point; the fact remains that the four voice parts can be easily distinguished, and I will now explain how.

THE SOPRANOS are the ones who sing the highest, and because of this they think they rule the world. They have longer hair, fancier jewelry, and swishier skirts than anyone else, and they consider themselves insulted if they are not allowed to go at least to a high F in every movement of any given piece. When they reach the high notes, they hold them for at least half again as long as the composer and/or conductor requires, and then complain that their throats are killing them and that the composer and conductor are sadists.

Sopranos have varied attitudes toward the other sections of the chorus, though they consider all of them inferior: The altos are to sopranos rather like second violins to first violins--nice to harmonize with, but not really necessary. All sopranos have a secret feeling that the altos could drop out and the piece would sound essentially the same, and they don't understand why anybody would sing in that range in the first place -- it's so boring.

Sopranos think tenors, on the other hand, can be very nice to have around; besides their flirtation possibilities (it is a well-known fact that sopranos never flirt with basses), sopranos like to sing duets with tenors because all the tenors are doing is working very hard to sing in a low-to-medium soprano range, while the sopranos are up there in the stratosphere showing off.

To sopranos, basses are the scum of the earth -- they sing too damn loud, are useless to tune to because they're down in that low, low range -- and there has to be something wrong with anyone who sings in the F clef, anyway. One curious fact, however, is that although the sopranos swoon while the tenors sing, they still end up going home (and/or to bed) with the basses.

THE ALTOS are the salt of the earth -- in their opinion, at least. Altos are unassuming people who would wear jeans to concerts if they were allowed to. Altos are in a unique position in the chorus in that they are unable to complain about having to sing either very high or very low, and they know that all the other sections think their parts are pitifully easy. But the altos know otherwise. They know that while the sopranos are screeching away on a high A, they are being forced to sing elaborate passages full of sharps and flats and tricks of rhythm, and nobody is noticing because the sopranos are singing too loud (and the basses usually are, too). Altos get a deep, secret pleasure out of conspiring together to tune the sopranos flat.

Altos have an innate distrust of tenors, because the tenors sing in almost the same range and think they sound better. They like the basses, and enjoy singing duets with them -- thebassesjust sound like a rumble anyway, and it's the only time the altos can really be heard. Altos' other complaint is that there are always too many of them and so they never get to sing really loud.

THE TENORS are spoiled. That's all there is to it. For one thing, there are never enough of them, and choir directors would rather sell their souls than let a halfway decent tenor quit, while they're always ready to unload a few sopranos or altos at half price. And then, for some reason, the few tenors there are always seem to be really good -- it's one of those annoying facts of life.

So it's no wonder that tenors always get swollen heads -- after all, who else can make sopranos swoon? The one thing that can make tenors insecure is the accusation (usually by the basses) that anyone singing that high couldn't possibly be a real man. In their usual perverse fashion, the tenors never acknowledge this, but just complain louder about the composer being a sadist and making them sing so damn high.

Tenors have a love-hate relationship with the conductor, too, because the conductor is always telling them to sing louder because there are so few of them. No conductor in recorded history has ever asked for less tenor in a forte passage.

Tenors feel threatened in some way by all the other sections -- the sopranos, because they can hit those incredibly high notes; the altos, because they have no trouble singing the notes the tenors kill themselves for; and the basses because, although they can't sing anything above an E, they sing it loud enough to drown the tenors out. Of course, the tenors would rather die than admit any of this.

It is a little-known fact that tenors move their eyebrows more than anyone else while singing. And it's true what Liszt said: tenors have resonance where their cerebra should be.

THE BASSES sing the lowest of anybody. This basically explains everything. They are solid, dependable people, and have more testosterone and facial hair than anybody else. By the same token, they also tend to baldness more than any of the other parts. The basses feel perpetually unappreciated, but they have a deep conviction that they are actually the most important part (a view endorsed by musicologists, but certainly not by sopranos or tenors), despite the fact that they have the most boring part of anybody and often sing the same note (or in endless fifths) for an entire page. They compensate for this by singing as loudly as they can get away with -- most basses are tuba players at heart.

Basses are the only section that can regularly complain about how low their part is, and they make horrible faces when trying to hit very low notes. Basses are charitable people, but their charity does not extend so far as tenors, whom they consider effete poseurs. Basses hate tuning the tenors more than almost anything else. Basses like altos -- except when they have duets and the altos get the good part.

As for the sopranos, they are simply in an alternate universe which the basses don't understand at all. They can't imagine why anybody would ever want to sing that high and sound that bad when they make mistakes. When a bass makes a mistake, the other three parts will cover him, and he can continue on his merry way, knowing that sometime, somehow, he will end up at the root of the chord.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Happy New Year!

Thank you all for last night! It was a pleasure to be back with you and making music...right  from the first downbeat! I have missed this over the holidays and I felt refreshed and rejuvinated after the rehearsal.  I hope you are feeling the same.

Dave J. - It was good to see you last night. I'm sure you were on all of our minds over the Christmas break and I hope last night's music was able to bring at least a little peace - even if it was for a short period of time. Please remember your friends are here for you.

Reference Recordings: Sean now has copies of most of the reference recordings and I have asked him to send a quick email to the choir to let you know when they are up on the website and how to access them. Christina is working on the Finnish texts for the two Rautaavara pieces, the three folksongs, and the Russian and Doukhobor texts for the Raminsh pieces. She will forward them to Sean who will also put them on the website. My sincere thanks to Christina and Sean who are an integral piece to us getting our heads around these languages. The reference YouTube recordings I have compiled for the rest of the rep are listed below, and I strongly urge you all to make use of all of these resources.  (note: some of the You Tube titles have more than one reference recording so you can compare)

Benedictio – Urmas Sisask:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnB1rC5sq94

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vCXxyG9p8Q

Totus Tuus – Gorecki: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3qOBQ1ZkQM

O Crux – Nystedt: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgx9VoDSXuQ

Ave Verum Corpus – Raminsh
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLtvqUaseLA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMoCREW2qNk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLtvqUaseLA&feature=related (musica intima)

Northern Lights – Gjeilo: http://www.waltonmusic.com/wmsearchfrm.html

O Sacrum Convivium – V. Miskinis: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_Tilkv3qIk

Please note that as per my announcement last night, I will be away on Tuesday's February 15 & 22 and Christina and Tristan will be taking both of those rehearsals.

For next week please work on:
Northern Lights - Gjeilo
      write in text!
     quick review. Check that weird join from m. 45-46 on p. 8
Ave Verum - Raminsh (review)
O Sacrum Convivium - Miskinis
     write in text!
     know A sections: m. 1-21 & 35-end;  sort out out B section m. 22-34
Benedicto - Sisask (Tristan will rehearse)
O Crux - Nystedt  - soprano 3 part divisi from m. 33 on is as follows:
     S1: Elisabeth, Paula, Danielle K.
     S2:  Ann, Christina
     S3: Danielle N., Shona, Marlene
Psalm of Invocation - Rautavaara (from Vigilia)

I won't get to it next week but women please begin working on First Snow (Holten) This will be a tough one to tune as the parts are esentially the same melody in different keys but in canon.

As per my announcement last night, please confirm on your schedules, the St. Bernard concert on Sunday, June 26 at 4pm (this has been on the blog calendar for some months now, so should not be a surprise)

Have a great week and enjoy this music. It will sound sensational in St. Patrick's. And   again...thank you for last night!