And you can see why a number of posters on The Choir threads can sometimes be overly concerned about the choral mix we hear in CE.
The old battle is 'hey, you sexist lot, girls have every right to be part of cathedral etc etc choirs, so back off and stop whingeing....' Etc contd p.94.
Yes, yes, get all that, but..............
It is undeniable that girls are a much steadier bet for Informatores choristarum in cathedral / church choirs in that their voices reliably and always, once selected and trained, sing beautifully through from 10 or so up to and beyond. Boys manifestly do not. Drop out rate for boys continuing to sing seriously through or after the change must be prodigious, hence the incremental loss of cadres of masculine voices.
So, where do you get the next generation? And I do NOT mean the top elect, but the basic kit for running any kind of mixed voice choir amateur, professional etc. Women are wonderfully keen to give it a go, men in their twenties onwards rarely so in singing terms. They have other priorities - seemingly. And unless they have been so excited by the business of singing from sometime back, it is the devil's own job enticing good young voices into group singing. The soloists mostly come from an ever diminishing number of schools - many but by no means all fee-paying - and a trickle from groundwork in church / cathedral choirs. But compared to the numbers of women in choirs / choral societies...............??? Erm......?
DoMs need choirs to enrich services, keep their jobs, keep music alive in communities, pass on the torch. Girls are easier to come by and sustain in the job than boys for that, so guess what.........you use girls. Of course, if survival and development are the criteria for keeping sung worship etcetc going.
So, the girls / women are then seen a lot in public singing, doing it brilliantly, and what does that tell boys? This kind of singing is not for you, mate...............it is a worrying vicious circle, and almost every DoM I have spoken to attests to it. Tenors? Phew........show me where.........!!
If schools try and establish a big mixed gender tradition, fine, and the kids can go out and expect to sing, but if in that critical 13-15/16 age span for boys, DoMs tell them to sit it out, and unless you don't find ways of encouraging them, then quietly telling them to 'sit it out' is pretty well anathema - they will stand back and let the girls do it and not come back. Seen it time and time again.
So, I am serious: give us a plan, give us blueprints that have worked in schools etc etc that YOU know to keep boys singing to a good level.
The old battle is 'hey, you sexist lot, girls have every right to be part of cathedral etc etc choirs, so back off and stop whingeing....' Etc contd p.94.
Yes, yes, get all that, but..............
It is undeniable that girls are a much steadier bet for Informatores choristarum in cathedral / church choirs in that their voices reliably and always, once selected and trained, sing beautifully through from 10 or so up to and beyond. Boys manifestly do not. Drop out rate for boys continuing to sing seriously through or after the change must be prodigious, hence the incremental loss of cadres of masculine voices.
So, where do you get the next generation? And I do NOT mean the top elect, but the basic kit for running any kind of mixed voice choir amateur, professional etc. Women are wonderfully keen to give it a go, men in their twenties onwards rarely so in singing terms. They have other priorities - seemingly. And unless they have been so excited by the business of singing from sometime back, it is the devil's own job enticing good young voices into group singing. The soloists mostly come from an ever diminishing number of schools - many but by no means all fee-paying - and a trickle from groundwork in church / cathedral choirs. But compared to the numbers of women in choirs / choral societies...............??? Erm......?
DoMs need choirs to enrich services, keep their jobs, keep music alive in communities, pass on the torch. Girls are easier to come by and sustain in the job than boys for that, so guess what.........you use girls. Of course, if survival and development are the criteria for keeping sung worship etcetc going.
So, the girls / women are then seen a lot in public singing, doing it brilliantly, and what does that tell boys? This kind of singing is not for you, mate...............it is a worrying vicious circle, and almost every DoM I have spoken to attests to it. Tenors? Phew........show me where.........!!
If schools try and establish a big mixed gender tradition, fine, and the kids can go out and expect to sing, but if in that critical 13-15/16 age span for boys, DoMs tell them to sit it out, and unless you don't find ways of encouraging them, then quietly telling them to 'sit it out' is pretty well anathema - they will stand back and let the girls do it and not come back. Seen it time and time again.
So, I am serious: give us a plan, give us blueprints that have worked in schools etc etc that YOU know to keep boys singing to a good level.
Comment