Celebration as Team Building

There doesn’t need to be an objective or obstacle for team building to occur. Sometimes all you need is a celebration. Christmas is a busy time of parties for all sorts of groups: work, church, social, family. A few hours in the same room, not working on “work” can strengthen the bonds […]

Don’t retire the Hallelujah Chorus

I recently read a well-argued and reasoned editorial advising that choirs retire from their Winter Concerts the Hallelujah chorus from Handel’s Messiah. The author made excellent points, but I disagree with his conclusion. I’d like to address some of the assertions and add my own thoughts. Familiarity is not a bad thing: the fact […]

People Want To Sing

People want to sing, they’re just waiting for someone to start. That is my experience of the last few weeks of turning off my internal singing censor. Whether at the grocery store (finding other people also singing along with the background music), walking through downtown (people crossed the street to join our family singing […]

Choirs In December

People suddenly remember how much they love choirs in December. So you see choirs rushing around to run outs, parties, tree lightings, and more. Even the professionals know this – 3 of the last 8 albums from The King’s Singers are Christmas albums, and while Chanticleer hasn’t released a Christmas album since […]

Wooden Wednesdays: Skill

Note: this is the eleventh of a series of posts investigating the leadership style of John Wooden and its applicability to choral music education. John Wooden’s central block in the third tier of his Pyramid of Success is SKILL. Wooden says, “At the very center of the Pyramid of Success is Skill. You have to know your stuff and […]

Collage Format

I love collage format – the holding of applause until the end of the concert – in certain situations. For example, the Holiday Collage Concert my high school music department presents every year. Collage format allowed for substantially more music in our 75 minutes concert by transitioning seamlessly from piece to piece, […]

To play without…

There is a popular quote from Beethoven that goes, “To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.” I certainly agree that passion must be an an integral part of great music-making. However, I think there’s something even more important. Here’s what I would say: To play […]