André's Rehearsal Notes for November 19th, 2025
Crunch Time Choral Evolution!
Our time is getting short. We have 2 more rehearsals before our dress rehearsal on December 2nd and concerts December 5 and 6. It’s amazing how the time has flown by. Only a few months ago most of this music was a mystery to us, now we can't get the tunes out of our heads.
You can each make an enormous difference in the quality of our performance in the coming weeks. Pay attention to your practice, really critique your knowledge of the music. Focus on passages that are fuzzier for you and clean them up. Listen and sing along with the recordings and do your best to sing out and commit to every entrance and cutoff.
Please put your music in the following concert order:
O Canada
Sing the Winter Away
Indian Summer (Echoes of Summer)
All the Little Rivers
Locus Iste
Solstice Carol
Away from the roll of the Sea
Thank you
Intermission
Un Canadien Errant
In the Early Mornin’ Rain
Make and Break Harbour
The Field Behind the Plow
Christmas Trilogy
Carol of the Bells
Here are the arrangements we will work on Wednesday evening:
- 7:00 Warm up and Locus Iste –
- 7:30 Sing the Winter Away
- 7:50 Solstice Carol
- 8:10 Break
- 8:20 Un Canadien Errant
- 8:40 Early Mornin’ Rain
- 9:00 Christmas Trilogy –
I will see you all at The Masonic Hall in Langford at 7 pm Wednesday November 19th.
André ♪
About singing “high notes”
There is a physical element to singing that can’t be imagined or explained, it has to be experienced. When you sing higher pitches, the vocal chords tighten in order to vibrate faster. Your breathing system has to respond with more breath pressure in order to overcome this tightening. When singers and teachers talk about supporting the tone, this is what they are often referring to. You must blow more air with more force in order to get the high notes to speak. Conversely, your vocal chords must be strong enough to resist that higher breath pressure. Practicing and trying are the only way to learn this balancing act.
Once you get the hang of this, it becomes second nature and the 2 systems, vocal chords and breath work together in harmony. But you must try to sing out regularly to develop that coordination. Imagining or singing quietly in your car will not do, you must experience and practice the skill. You must find a big room and sing those rising phrases repeatedly, even if you fail. Eventually, the systems will balance themselves and you will develop strong high notes.
· Sing regularly in a large room. Sing high passages on “OO” at first, it will be easier, then move to an “AH” and then add the words without losing the feeling.
· Don’t worry about cracking or sounding bad, that is part of the process. Over time, strength and coordination will build and you will gain confidence when attempting higher passages.
· Sing those higher passages multiple times and return to them regularly. Sing a comfortable Mezzo Forte at first, then get softer for passages marked Piano.
· Use Locus Iste as a practice piece, there is lots of variety.
