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JENNY BENT | SONOMA STATE UNIVERSITY ANGEL M. VÁZQUEZ-RAMOS | CSU BAKERSFIELD SELECTING AND TEACHING REPERTORY FOR THE SINGERS YOU HAVE AND THE CHOIR YOU WANT TO BUILD OBJECTIVES

• Share ideas about choosing and teaching repertory that will help develop the ensemble.

• Share repertory that has worked for us and ideas on how to teach it. WHAT IS THE CHOIR WE WANT TO BUILD?

• The ideal ensemble - sings with artistry and passion. Its tone quality is age appropriate, resonant, and free. It possesses impeccable intonation, balance, and clear diction. I Loved All Lovely Things Middle School Only in Sleep HOW TO ACHIEVE IT?

• Musicianship

• Vocal Technique

• Literature Selection CONSIDERATIONS FOR DEVELOPING SINGERS IN MS/HS

• Repertory that builds musical independence (Bowers, 2009)

• Melody

• Add an Ostinato

• Partner

• Descant MELODY PARTNER CONSIDERATIONS FOR DEVELOPING SINGERS IN MS/HS

• Chord roots

• Round

• Transition Songs

• 2 or 4 Part COME TO THE MUSIC JOSEPH M. MARTIN OLD JOE CLARK ARR. EARLENE RENTZ PHILOSOPHY AND VALUES

Develop a strategic plan of short and longterm goals for the following:

• Your program (enrollment target, number/type of ensembles, program structure, etc)

• Each choir (voicing, musicianship goals, technical skills, achievements, preparation for moving into next level ensemble, etc) How do you plan to achieve these goals? Are they realistic? PHILOSOPHY AND VALUES

• Strengths: What do you have?

• Weaknesses: What do you need?

• Opportunities: What can you change now? Later?

• Threats: What can prevent your plan? PHILOSOPHY AND VALUES

Backward Design - start with the end in mind (Wiggins & McTighe, 1998) PHILOSOPHY AND VALUES

Repertoire must have a purpose within your strategic plan.

“The selection of repertoire is an ongoing process determined by the specific needs of each new school year and each new .” (Brunner, 1992, p. 29) “Researchers have found that effective choral music educators possess an advanced knowledge of choral literature and an ability to select music appropriate for their ensembles.”

(REAMES, 2001, P.122). COMMON PROGRAMMING “MISHAPS” - WHEN WE FORGET OUR GOALS

• Music is technically too difficult for choir (programming masterworks before choir is ready)

• Program is too big/difficult or small/easy (quality over quantity)

• Performance selections lack variety (style, time period, , language, elements of diversity, etc)

• Music is not a good match for performance venue acoustic QUALITY REPERTOIRE

• Form (Is there one? Does it make sense?)

• Melody (original, proper , logical text inflection, etc)

(voice leading, well-prepared entrances, balance of tension and release)

• Expression (age level appropriateness, ability to affect the singer and listener, anticipation/surprise) A CUCKOO FLEW OUT OF THE WOODS ARR. B. WAYNE BISBEE FRANCESCO DURANTE QUALITY REPERTOIRE

Repertoire should never hinder the development of healthy vocal technique (breath support, resonance, vowel placement, diction, etc.) It supports sequential teaching. DICTION: WHY IS IT SO IMPORTANT?

Unify regional dialects Improve tone and acoustic quality (ie Intonation) Promote choral “cleanliness” & vocal technique Provide phrasing “blueprint” (inflection) INTERNATIONAL PHONETIC ALPHABET (IPA)

Those symbols you see in the dictionary in brackets following a word. 1. CONSONANTS VOICED VS. UNVOICED

Example offenders: [b] vs. [p] [z] vs. [s] [d] vs. [t] sad vs. sat [f] vs. [v] [m] and [n] 2. RRRRRR FLIPPED, ROLLED, OR NEITHER?

Italian/Latin Flip it if between two vowels (intervocalic) (“Libera”) Roll otherwise (”Christe,” “Rex,”) “ Domine de morte aeternam” 3. THE ROSE RULE

In Latin and Italian, ”s” between two vowels is pronounced [z]. (Double “ss” is still pronounced [s])

In Latin, final ”s” if following a voiced consonant. Eg. “omnipotens” 4. “D” AND “T”

[d] and [t] are dental in Latin.

“Tina eats tuna fish on Tuesday” 5. THE LETTER “H”

Latin “mihi” [mi ki] (otherwise “h” in Latin is always silent) 6. DIPHTHONGS

No diphthongs in Latin. (The combination of two sounds in one syllable.) Sustain pitch on initial vowel sound. ”Deo” [dɛɔ] “dona” [dɔnɑ] 7. WORD CONNECTION Separate words when you run the risk of unintended text

”Your age” “Its cares” ”He watching over Israel slumbers not nor sleeps.” “If ice melt” “Let us pray” “Sing we and chant it” 8. OPEN VS. CLOSED VOWELS

“e” and ”o” are open in Latin. “in” is [in], not [ɪn] FLOW THEORY

Developed by Hungarian psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (b. 1934).

We place value on the "optimal experience," a "feeling of being in control of our actions leading to a deep sense of enjoyment that is long cherished"

"a balance between skill and challenge"

(Hopkins, Michael. "Programming in the Zone." Music Educators Journal (June 2013): p.70.) ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT (ZPD)

Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)

“the distance between the actual developmental level as determined by independent problem solving and the level of potential development as determined through problem solving under adult guidance, or in collaboration with more capable peers.”

“What the child is able to do in collaboration today he will be able to do independently tomorrow.

(Hopkins, Michael. "Programming in the Zone." Music Educators Journal (June 2013): p.70.)

THIS LITTLE BABE PROGRAMMING CONSIDERATIONS

• Theme

• Overall "flow" of the program

• Repertory that shows our values: social issues, female , ethnic & multicultural CONSIDERATIONS FOR DEVELOPING SINGERS IN MS/HS

• Matching Pitch

• Range - Male changing voice

• Unchanged/treble

• Cambiata

CANST THOU LOVE ME, LADY? ANDREA RAMSEY SISI NI MOJA JACOB NARVERUD REFERENCES

• Brunner, D. (1992). Choral repertoire a director’s checklist: Thoughtful selection of repertoire enriches choral . Music Education Journal 79(1) 29-32

• Hopkins, M. (2013). Programing in the zone repertoire selection for the large ensemble. Music Educators Journal 99,(4) 69-74

• Reames, R. (2001). High school choral director’s description of appropriate literature for beginning high school choirs. Journal of Research in Music Education 49 (2) 122-135 CONTACT INFORMATION

• Jenny Bent Director of Choral Studies Sonoma State University [email protected]

• Angel M. Vázquez-Ramos Director of Choral & Vocal Studies California State University, Bakersfield [email protected]