Socials and 'second rehearsal' (being going out for coffee after The Rehearsal) are essential for the bonding that makes a real choir. The most committed choir in my experience was the thirty-or-so voice choir of St Ambrose, Houston, when Msgr di Primeo was pastor. We convened rehearsal promptly at seven for group work, after a while we broke up for sectionals, then reconvened to put things together. Often we would stay after nine, which was the offiical end of rehearsal - we would often work until ten or later to get an anthem (such as Weelkes's 'Alleluia, I Heard a Voice') polished well enough for Sunday. Then we would go out to somewhere for coffee and dessert which at times lasted until mid-night. We had choir parties every few months. Social bonding is essential for the esprit de corps of any choir. It can make all the difference in the quality of music making that any choir aspires to. There is much more to choir than just 'choir'. Many of the frustrations that we experience as choirmasters arise from a lack of bonding, and the lack of a true love of being part of a choir and making sacred music to be presented to God at worship....never go out...
And they've been doing it since mediaeval times.
When choir members miss dates and directions despite multiple emails/handouts/announcements.
My people follow in chant very well, but if I stop singing, cacophony is virtually guaranteed within a dozen notes.
vent at your steering wheel on the way home (or when you have some alone time with the wheel).
My people follow in chant very well, but if I stop singing, cacophony is virtually guaranteed within a dozen notes.
I'm imagining a sample of one of your car rides home:
I'm stopped to take a stagger breath, and the singers glare at me in abject terror,
Also knowing what a fine choir such as that at Christ Church Cathedral sounds like and not having one at the Catholic cathedral - nor having the liturgy to go with it!...sounds like...
G.O.A.T. award
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