A thoughtful contribution to the subject.
Boy and Girl Choristers R4 Today
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostA thoughtful contribution to the subject.
https://jessicamusic.blogspot.com/20...al-expert.html"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostA thoughtful contribution to the subject.
https://jessicamusic.blogspot.com/20...al-expert.htmlOriginally posted by Caliban View Post
Choral conductor Suzi Digby did an experiment several years ago, creating two parallel after-school classes. One was mixed with 12 girls and 12 boys, and the other was all boys. At the end of two years, both groups had grown to have over 40 singers, and yet there were only two boys left in the mixed class. It’s not a huge step from boys losing confidence to giving up entirely.
Part of the sheer joy of joining the mixed school choir when I was 11 was being sat amongst the girls from the Fifth and Sixth Form, and the opportunity not only to work with them and learn from them, but also to chat with them socially, and listen their conversations (I was only eleven - I wasn't a "threat", and didn't inhibit their chatting). When my voice broke, and I moved over to the basses, rehearsals weren't nearly as much fun.
Obviously such individual anecdotal comments don't contradict the wider findings of the research mentioned - and I'm not making any comment on the Kings College tradition - but I am bewildered to hear that most boys find singing with girls detrimental to their confidence.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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<< Research has shown that boys sing better in an all-male environment, in which it is totally normal to love singing, and do it every day. I fear that if we were to mix the treble line, the boys would lose confidence.
Choral conductor Suzi Digby did an experiment several years ago, creating two parallel after-school classes. One was mixed with 12 girls and 12 boys, and the other was all boys. At the end of two years, both groups had grown to have over 40 singers, and yet there were only two boys left in the mixed class. It’s not a huge step from boys losing confidence to giving up entirely. >>
Which is pretty well precisely what ardcarp and I were saying upthread.
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Originally posted by DracoM View Post<< Research has shown that boys sing better in an all-male environment, in which it is totally normal to love singing, and do it every day. I fear that if we were to mix the treble line, the boys would lose confidence.
Choral conductor Suzi Digby did an experiment several years ago, creating two parallel after-school classes. One was mixed with 12 girls and 12 boys, and the other was all boys. At the end of two years, both groups had grown to have over 40 singers, and yet there were only two boys left in the mixed class. It’s not a huge step from boys losing confidence to giving up entirely. >>
Which is pretty well precisely what ardcarp and I were saying upthread.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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But, FF. it IS an unassailable, biological fact that boys voices shift/ drop/change in as dramatic a way as possible - hence it IS indeed 'a male problem'.
Whereas girls do not have anything like the same drama. So much of what happens to a boy in/through /post that change is unavoidably disturbing and in some senses socially, musically, psychologically disempowering, such that while it is true that most girls can pretty well cope with singing through whatever adolescence does to them, boys actually physically CANNOT beyon an uncertain juggling croak, and most simply do not sing past their 'break' for years to come - if ever.
So, yes, it IS a male problem, but one that can be helped if boys are kept singing with other boys - yeah, yeah, all men together stuff. The loss of status and identity a boy feels in the break singing in a mixed choir is often hard to bear. and one that unless we create the right team spirit, boys stop simply singing.
A chorister at St Paul's once told me that when his voice-change took place, even though he knew he would re-find a voice, nevertheless while it happened he felt as if someone had cut off his right hand. He dared not talk much in public, and certainly could not properly sing for a good eighteen months. He said he felt 'other' and lost.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostBut, FF. it IS an unassailable, biological fact that boys voices shift/ drop/change in as dramatic a way as possible - hence it IS indeed 'a male problem'.
It's just a lot more difficult than doing things the same way as they've always been done because 'that works for boys'.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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The onus, perhaps, lies on the broadcasters? There are dozens of these, so there is no reason why there shouldn't be alternative (or, more positively, additional) broadcasts of such services/events from all-female and mixed choirs. Rather than demanding a change in a "product" that many people find deeply satisfying, the demand should be for platforms showcasing what other* listeners want. It should be used as an opportunity, not a threat - it's just the limited imagination of broadcasters that's causing the problem.
(* - as well as, I wouldn't be surprised, some of the audience who love the all-male event.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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No, it is NOT just a musical problem: as I tried to indicate that for boys, the voice change can be socially and psychologically disturbing as well.
IME MANY boys do not trust their voice enough to talk in class publicly in case the voice cracks - hence loss of some valuable social and academic profile, serious giggles and nudges from behind them as they croak - they can shout on the games field and swear like troopers, oh yes, but careful chat in public is a risk-take, and as for asking them to sing, audition for plays ............... Schools often find they have to wean them carefully back into the expressive arts fold. Instrumentalists say playing an instrument was a lifeline over the break because that kept them singing inside their heads.
Boy-led choirs are precious, and different. Mixed choirs are precious and different too.
Sigh......so.....well, try this.................
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Isn't this really about visibility ?
Those folks already involved in a music can often miss the point about how others might feel that it is something they could get involved in.
If the only time choral singing appears on the TV is KCC at Christmas and there are never any girls appearing then those girls (who are 50% of the population) who might feel that this is something would like to do will simply see that it's not for them.
I've had to argue for equity far too many times in the last few years in other musical contexts.
If there is never "someone like me" doing something I might like to do then I won't think it is for me.
The arguments against (and in my experience they have mostly to do with the visibility of women composers) are usually along the lines of "I thought we were championing quality" or "I'm against tokenism" etc etc which all really boil down to those in positions of power want to hold onto their own privilege and have nothing to do with "quality" or even sonic "uniqueness".
Given that THIS broadcast is often the only place anyone not involved will see this type of musicking then it really is quite simple to solve it. Which doesn't mean fewer boys sing or even the abolition of single sex choirs.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostNo, it is NOT just a musical problem: as I tried to indicate that for boys, the voice change can be socially and psychologically disturbing as well.
Originally posted by DracoM View PostSchools often find they have to wean them carefully back into the expressive arts fold.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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