@tsoapm I would say that singers are included yes, as they are musicians in the fullest sense, but would obviously have a slightly different skill set. What are your thoughts?
Christiansens, Noble, Shaw etc.
This list is depressing me. I feel like I should be fired.
I did note that no one specified walking on water as a desirable skill to have.
Perhaps Charles could elaborate on just what precise manner he thinks such aquatic panache would be needful for a Church Musician. It is, of course, altogether possible that this entire thing is pure speculation on his part.
I am in the process of creating some courses for my diocese and would like your input.
What should any sacred musician know? Any particular standards they should be achieveing etc.?
This is a huge part of my prep, please feel free to rant wisely :)
Semi-ironically, in my Italian choir, someone was asking what “mf” meant last week... (it could be molto forte)Our choir can't (at present, not intrinsically!) really read music:
While the absolute ideal might be one person who can do every single thing excellently,
Why would improv be a necessary skill for a church musician?
Not a useful skill in most parishes.
Why would improv be a necessary skill for a church musician?
...forgot...
...if improvisation is inappropriate...
No, I was not kidding. One of the reasons I've seen that jazz is inappropriate as liturgical music is it's improvisational nature. So, if improvisation is inappropriate for liturgical music, why is it a necessary skill for a church musician?
One of the issues I have with improvisations is that I have heard them turn into performances.
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