Sick and Angry

No matter how many times I get sick, I can’t shake a deep sense of anger about being sick. I’m angry at letting down my family, students, my clients. I’m angry at being unable to do all the things I do in a day. But I also know that the […]

Dynamics in Context

We brainstormed a list of ways to make a subito piano more striking. At least half of them related to our interpretation of the previous forte section. Dynamics are not absolute: they work in deep relationship to what’s happening around them, in terms of contrast, timbre, tone, placement in the piece, voicing, language, […]

Structural Engineering

Can we agree that “music theory” can make the subject sound a little…dry? Esoteric? Unnecessary? Here’s a better comparison. Music Theory is the Structural Engineering of music. Architects can dream up beautiful forms and dramatic lines, but without structural engineers, they can’t build them safely and effectively. (It’s been said […]

Two Weeks Left

Two weeks left in 2018 – how will you use them? Traditionally we use it to look backward – a worthwhile reckoning with what we’ve accomplished or attempted. Two weeks from today, we’ll look forward – make resolutions, go on diets. There’s value in both, and there’s something to be […]

Knowing Your Line

I do guided listenings every December in which we listen to multiple performances/arrangements of the same song. It’s a fascinating education in arrangement, interpretation, timbre, and ensemble. (More here, here, here, here.) My takeaway from tonight’s listening is about knowing your line. We listened to eight different choral/vocal arrangements of Silent Night […]

Freshness

Freshness is a passing things. A fresh bunch of bananas turns brown in a week, and a fresh batch of cookies is gone in a few days. (At least, around my kids it is…) The opposite of fresh in the kitchen is pantry-safe. Staples, we call them. Dry beans, pasta, […]

The Most Sophisticated

I would ask for a moment of silence to remember the storytelling singer Nancy Wilson but I can’t stop listening to her beautiful recordings. She brought to her interpretations such sophistication, such compelling artistry and connection to the story inside the songs. Making the rounds today is her stirring, utterly […]

Zip a Circle

When you are doing warmups, try to get out of your usual rehearsal standing arrangement. I’m particularly interested in using a “zipped circle” to focus on vowel and timbre matching. Have the choir form a circle, and then, like a zipper, come together into two rows facing each other. Now, […]

B is not B-Flat

Most music students I’ve known go through and intermediate phase on their way to being musically literate. During this phase, they know what the middle line on treble clef is, but fail to take into account the accidentals or key signature. “What note are you singing there?” “B.” “B….?” “Oh, […]