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TexasTowelie

(117,584 posts)
Sat May 9, 2020, 05:14 AM May 2020

Choirs may have to remain silent long after society reopens

Long after churches, schools and theaters reopen, the choirs that have inhabited them are likely to remain silent.

There is no safe way for singers to rehearse as a group until there is a vaccine and a 95 percent-effective treatment for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, and it could be two years before both happen, a national panel of music and medical experts told choral directors this week. That message, delivered in a webinar on Tuesday night, sent shockwaves across the global music community.

As soon as he heard about it, Maine-based choral director Robert Russell corresponded with a colleague in Kentucky to compare notes. “We were both disconsolate. It was a sobering and staggering report that finally brings home the severity of this crisis,” said Russell, music director of ChoralArt and a retired University of Southern Maine vocal professor.

This week’s news will impact every church choir, community chorus, vocal ensemble, musical theater and opera company, he said, because proper singing requires vocalists to push the air from their lungs out into the performance space. “In singing, we teach athletic breathing. Of all the things I say to singers in rehearsals, the phrase ‘move the air’ is one that I am constantly referencing. You always want to be moving the air and always have the feeling the air is moving forward, so the phrase you are singing has forward motion,” he said.

Read more: https://www.pressherald.com/2020/05/09/choirs-may-have-to-remain-silent-long-after-society-reopens/#

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Choirs may have to remain silent long after society reopens (Original Post) TexasTowelie May 2020 OP
Thanks for this......... MyOwnPeace May 2020 #1
As a singer and a long-time choir member.. luvs2sing May 2020 #2
I'm thinking instrumental music is the same Freddie May 2020 #3
You are correct. TexasTowelie May 2020 #4
Yikes. I read about the choir in Washington and thought about what that meant for group activities tanyev May 2020 #5

MyOwnPeace

(17,280 posts)
1. Thanks for this.........
Sat May 9, 2020, 05:30 AM
May 2020

The sad story of the choir in Washington really puts a focus on the numbers in a room and the activity taking place. As an active choir member I'm not encouraged............

luvs2sing

(2,234 posts)
2. As a singer and a long-time choir member..
Sat May 9, 2020, 06:13 AM
May 2020

this is both heartbreaking and sadly comforting to read. At least I know my director won’t be rushing us to resume rehearsals. He sent us similar information yesterday. For now, we sing on Zoom, and I sing to my dog.

Freddie

(9,744 posts)
3. I'm thinking instrumental music is the same
Sat May 9, 2020, 06:39 AM
May 2020

Mentioned briefly in the article. Don’t think community concert band is resuming rehearsal anytime soon

TexasTowelie

(117,584 posts)
4. You are correct.
Sat May 9, 2020, 07:01 AM
May 2020

Off topic here, but it is actually one of the biggest challenges that Star Trek Discovery is facing in post-production for season three. They are having each of the 60 musicians record their parts and the sound engineers are assembling it together like a jigsaw puzzle from what I read.

It is also distressing to me since I played trumpet through college.

tanyev

(44,759 posts)
5. Yikes. I read about the choir in Washington and thought about what that meant for group activities
Sat May 9, 2020, 08:28 AM
May 2020

right now, but I hadn't followed that train of thought down the road. I've taken line dance classes for several years and love it. Even if they start up again in June I was going to wait awhile longer, but it hadn't occurred to me that it could be a couple years before it's truly safe. Crap.

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