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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:
A Shining Night
A recent article in the Wall Street Journal calls Morten Lauridson the "best composer you've never heard of."
 
Choral musicians don't say that, do we?
 
It looks like a film will come out soon on this composer -- a deep look into the composer's thoughts, inspirations, and ideas.
 
From the article:

The film, directed by Michael Stillwater, is a heartening rarity, a thoroughly intelligent classical-music program that strikes an appropriate balance between words and music. Most of the talking is done by Mr. Lauridsen himself and all of it is to the point, but plenty of time is devoted to the music that is the true point of "Shining Night," and by film's end you'll know what it sounds like and whether you want to hear more of it—as I expect you will.

 
A great trailer here from YouTube gives you a feeling for the hymn:
 
 
A good friend from the Samford Music faulty pointed me to this article - Thanks, Ron!
 
Michael Zaugg to take helm of Pro Coro Canada

EDMONTON - The position of artistic director at Pro Coro Canada was finally announced Friday night, and the winner is: Michael Zaugg.

The sixth person to hold the job since the choir was founded in 1980, the Montreal-based Zaugg beat out some fairly stiff competition in San Francisco’s Magen Solomon and Yale Russian Chorus conductor Mark Bailey to replace Richard Sparks, who left last year for a position at the University of North Texas.

 
New Mealor Choral Work Seeks Record-Breaking Bass Singer
BBC MOBILE -- 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.

Musical notation for the low E

It is six semitones below the lowest note found in a mainstream choral work - a B flat in Rachmaninov's Vespers.

The search for the bass voice will take place via trade magazines and online.

"My setting of De Profundis calls for a rich and powerful voice; a voice that can not only touch the heart with its sincerity and truth, but also make every fabric of the human body resonate as it plunges into the very lowest parts of the vocal spectrum," said Mealor.

(Ed. note: the current Guiness World's Record for lowest note is F#, a whole step above this target, sung in 2011 by US gospel quartet singer Roger Menees)

 
 
Music more than just a job
By Carol Joseph
 
NAPLES, FL -- It's been said that when you love what you do, work doesn't feel like work.  And for 51-year-old Becky Lynn Weese, truer words have never been spoken.  "I just love what I do," proclaims Weese, director of music and the organist at the Naples United Church of Christ (UCC). "I love, love, love it," she adds for emphasis.

Weese, who has undergraduate degrees in church music and music education and a doctorate in musical arts and choral conducting, doesn't see her job as work, but more as something she's both called and blessed to do.

"I'm one of those people, that I get up in the morning and I pinch myself how lucky I am," she says enthusiastically of the job she's had for almost 11 years.

 
 
Indianapolis Children's Choir to sing at Super Bowl

Forty-five members of Indianapolis Children's Choir will sing the national anthem along with recording artist Kelly Clarkson at the Super Bowl in Indianapolis on Sunday, the local not-for-profit announced Thursday.

The choir members will be conducted by ICC founder Henry Leck and Assistant Artistic Director Joshua Pedde.

 
 
Victoria's Starlight Pops Choir rocks out
VICTORIA, BC -- When Victoria choral director Sue Doman formed the Starlight Pops Choir in 2008, she never dreamed that the group, made up mostly of retirees, would be able to wrap their heads – and their voices – around the music ofElton John, Paul Simon, The Police, Queen, U2StarlightPopsChoir and The Rolling Stones.

“Some folks hear the words ‘rock music’ and it scares them a bit because they think it’ll be loud and harsh, but it’s not,” said Doman. “Our program focuses on classic songs people know like Rock Around The Clock, Louie Louie, and I Heard It Through The Grapevine.

"We’ve had tons of fun putting this concert together, and we know our audiences will have fun, too. As usual, they may just find themselves singing along.”