Master Four Notes First

Happy Gene Puerling Day! Let’s take a lesson from his writing today. Born on March 31, 1929, Gene Puerling didn’t invent close harmony singing, but he perfected it. With two remarkable ensembles (The Hi-Lo’s and The Singers Unlimited), Gene developed a vocabulary of distinct sounds that remains the bedrock of vocal arrangers to this […]

Two Sentences Worth Memorizing

To high school students everywhere, here are two sentences worth memorizing for those two questions you always get from well-meaning adults. Q1: What do you want to be when you grow up? Your response: What did you want to be when you were sixteen? At sixteen, I was certain I was going to […]

Recording Studio Insights

A recording studio session can be a powerful learning tool for students. I wish more high school students had the chance to spend a few hours tracking in a studio; they can learn great lessons about: Consistency Musicianship Musical Process Personal responsibility Patience Ensemble trust and forgiveness Breaking down a well-learned piece of music […]

Invisible Growth

One of the best results of embarking on a new personal learning journey is the educational insights it brings along. As educators we would do well to remember that there is often a time when a skill is being developed that no progress is apparent. You are learning and growing, but you cannot show–or […]

A Joke in Another Language

I remember my Latin professor laughing at a joke in Horace one semester as class began, and then asserting that the best way to recognize your fluency is when you “get the joke” in another language. I was reminded of this the other day, when I was able to make some members of The Real […]

Less

Make your goal as a conductor this one word: less. What must you do to encourage musicality from your singers? Do this and nothing more. Can you discern between necessary and unnecessary work? Try less. The biggest goal I set for myself as a conductor this year was to be offstage […]

Take The Day After

Our lives are ever more rushed. Music teachers especially: we run from event to event, in an uninterrupted blur of weeks running from August to June. (Then the planning begins…) I am here to encourage you to give yourself a break on the day after a big event. You’ve planned, you’ve cajoled, you’ve […]

Creating Singular Experiences

One of the important jobs a choir director owns is in creating singular experiences. Whether in travel, like my friend Greg heading to Europe in seven days, or connection, like singing for a visiting motivational speaker, as a group at my school did this morning. Most of all, we create singular musical experiences – which should involve […]