André's Rehearsal Notes for Oktober 18th, 2025
You should be PROUD Choral Evolution!
Not many Community Choirs attempt so much new music with such diversity of style. The SATB format makes the task even more impressive, adding complexity and removing a lot of repetition. You could be doing sing along arrangements of tunes you already know. Yet you choose to embrace growing as a group by working on significant arrangements that push us to our limits. Let’s be proud of that for a moment.
We finished reading through all our December concert repertoire last night. We’ll now circle back and start rehearsing and polishing each piece. I added up all the timings today and our program is indeed too long by about 10 minutes.
So I have decided to cut: Cantique de Jean Racine and Voices Arising. Hopefully we’ll do both at next year’s fall show. This will lighten our workload and give us more time on each piece. Please stop working on them :) This leaves us with almost exactly 45 mins of music.
Here are the arrangements we will work on Saturday:
9:00 Warm-up and Locus Iste – I’m using this as a tuning, blend and dynamics exercise. Plus it’s very beautiful!!
Bruckner: "Locus iste" (Stanford Chamber Chorale) for some inspiration
9:40 Solstice Carol – Please keep working at those rhythms and entrances. Antiphony sings "Solstice Carol"
10:10 All the Little Rivers – Keep this fresh by singing it daily. You can’t be reading all those words in a concert; you will have to know them by heart. Note this choir sings from memory 😊
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=seGB6wwbwSE&list=RDseGB6wwbwSE&start_radio=1
10:40 Away from the roll of the Sea – Good practice for singing long lyrical lines, lovely tones A fine performance by an Australian choir! Away from the Roll of the Sea - Allister MacGillivray, arr. Diane Loomer | Concordis Chamber Choir
11:00 Break
11:30 Sing the Winter Away – Lots of tricky rhythms to master. This group reminded me of us!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9jjgQULEyI&list=RDV9jjgQULEyI&start_radio=1
12:00 The Field Behind the Plow –
Every line has slightly different rhythms, pickups you need to know. Get to know the original material:
The Field Behind the Plow
12:30 Un Canadien Errant – This French Speaking choir from Edmonton will be visiting Victoria in May of 2026. They do a Beautiful Job of this arrangement.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02j5sGbIoFw&list=RD02j5sGbIoFw&start_radio=1
I will see you all Saturday Oktober 18th at St Rose of Lima at 9 am.
André ♪
musictheory.net is a free resource that will teach you all about how written music works. There are theory lessons and ear training for every level of musician. Click on the word “lessons” at the top left and do at least one lesson a day. Each lesson takes just a few minutes to complete and they are fun!. Click on the sentences at the bottom of the page to advance through the lesson. Spending a few minutes a day here will help you become more comfortable with written music.
Reminders:
✓ We have Excellent New music, mark lightly with pencils only. You will have to erase it all at the end of the session when you return your music.
✓ Please bring a pencil to rehearsal ✓ Mark your parts, make lots of notes – the score is a road map to beautiful music but we have to all agree on how we will perform it.
✓ In long passages, decide where you will breathe, mark it down and practice it. For instance, the opening phrases of “Away from the roll of the Sea” should be sung in 9 bar blocks and you need to be sure where you will sneak a breath
✓ Practice – know your parts – use the practice tracks. While it’s great to listen to the tracks, it’s even better to follow them with the music in front of you. We will be stopping and starting a lot at rehearsals, and you’ll be able to follow better if you have been looking at the score as you sing.
✓ Sing out loud in a big room as often as you can. As you learn a tune practice singing as you would in a show. This will strengthen your voice and our choral sound.
