There can be stars in choirs, but a discerning listener of the
best choruses can’t distinguish one voice from another. Unless you have a solo,
you are supposed to blend in, not stick out. And, it turns out, sticking out is
not just about the sound. Choruses, like teams, often wear uniforms, coordinate
moves: lifting and setting down their music folders, entering and exiting a
stage with precision. Much of being a chorus doesn’t just involve singing well.
In sixth grade, I made the all-county chorus—as a first
soprano! The only thing I recall of the experience is the principal of my
school mentioning he spotted me right off—I was the one yawning before the
performance began. Even from a distance he recognized me because of my
idiosyncrasy.
In junior high, competing schedules forced me to choose
between band and chorus. With a voice that provided random octaves and a
pre-teen boy’s embarrassment over the same, my tenor sax and I chose the band. I
was content to sing long hours along with the radio.
By the time I reached high school, my voice had sorted
itself out and I sang tenor in my church choir. The choir had a sufficiency of
bass/baritones, so both my father and I sang tenor. Neither of us were natural
tenors, but we could hit the high notes. We did have a third tenor in the choir
and he had a fine natural voice but was, unfortunately, a bit shaky on the notes. The
director determined that if Dad and I bracketed him, the true tenor sang the
right notes, and as a threesome we had sufficient volume to carry our part. The
result of making individual sacrifices (my throat did hurt after pieces like
Handel’s Messiah) made for a better overall result.
For nearly twenty-five years after high school, I was not a
choir member; but when I changed jobs and moved to Cincinnati, I was determined
to join a church with a choir. I visited St. John’s Unitarian (one of four
Unitarian churches I was checking out) the Sunday their morning service
consisted of a congregational sing of selections from their brand new hymnal. Sometimes
you are in the right place at the right time and need to recognize your luck. I
had a blast sight-reading the bass parts. Someone in the congregation ratted me
out to the choir director, who buttonholed me before I even left the sanctuary.
The next Thursday I attended my first rehearsal.
That choir performed some great music, especially as part of
our annual Spring concerts: Mozart, Bach, Brahms, Vaughn Williams, contemporary
pieces as well, including my favorite American composer, Morten Lauridsen, plus
South American and Indian works. I sang English, Latin, French, German,
Spanish, Hindi, and Swahili (and probably others as well). Those works were a
stretch for me and for the choir, but the hard work was always worth the effort
even if the concert performances were never perfect.
[Here's a YouTube of Lauridsen's "Dirait-on" if you'd like a 5-minute treat.]
Through that association, I had an opportunity to sing in a
chorus that performed with the Cincinnati Symphony at Riverbend. We had only
four rehearsals and were expected to come to the first rehearsal knowing the
music (light years away from my early grammar school days of learning music by
rote). What an eye-opening experience that was for this decidedly amateur
performer. Everyone sang out (in church choirs there are usually just a few who
sing out and the rest follow) and it was easy to find my mistakes and correct
them because people on the right and left of me were singing something
different. The rehearsal conductor expected us to correct our own mistakes. He
concentrated on entrances, cutoffs, and shaping the sound. We had one dress
rehearsal with the full orchestra under the baton of Jesus Lopez-Cobos, and
then the performance.
When we left Cincinnati and joined the choir of the
Unitarian Universalist Church of Savannah in 2010, it was very small with a few
excellent singers, but many much less skilled than I. We sang simple music,
often in two or three parts, not the eight-part harmony of the works we often
did at St. John’s. It was a bit discouraging, but I held onto a recognition I
had made years ago: no matter how tired I was as I dragged myself from work to
rehearsal, I felt refreshed at the end of the two hours. Even though in
Savannah rehearsals were shorter, and the pieces less satisfying, I still
retained that feel-better-after-singing experience.
And over the years, more quality singers joined the Savannah
choir. I thought, oh good, now we’ll start doing more robust works. That hasn’t
happened; this choir director has chosen to take her finer choral instrument
and shape its sound. Pitches are now spot on, not just very close. She works on
the sound of vowels, precise cutoffs and entrances. Rarely, we’ll end up with
six or eight parts for a portion of a piece, but what is most important to her
is our sound.
For a boy brought up in the nasal-speaking Rochester, NY
area, rounded vowels are sometimes a stretch. I still miss singing the big
pieces and would like to do more of that before I lose my voice and can no
longer sing; but in the meantime, I’ve discovered I can bury myself in the hard
work of sounding as one voice of a beautiful chorus.
~ Jim
This post originally appeared on the Writers Who Kill blog 5/7/2017.
~ Jim
This post originally appeared on the Writers Who Kill blog 5/7/2017.
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