DracoM, that's most heartening for two reasons: 1. The numbers of young singers involved, and 2. It has raised my opinion of Roland Fudge, who is best known for some rather feeble arrngemnts in the hymnbook "Mission Praise". If it's the same person.)
Is singing dying?
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With friends like this, who needs enemies?
I picked up a copy of "Life & Living" Summer 2012' and chanced upon the seemingly positive article - Why Singing is Good for You. it began as follows:
"Questionable memories of school choirs may still lurk in the recesses of your mind, but don't be put off. Nowadays choirs thankfully have changed beyond recognition. Today, you're far more likely to be singing Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody than Handel's Halleujah Chorus - and having a huge amount of fun in the process, as Christine Tagg discovered when she joined a choir two years ago."
There is some merit in what follows, but further snide comments are to be found further on.
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EA Don't despair. There is an interest in so-called 'community choirs' to which anyone can turn up irrespective of ability and have a good sing-song. It's partly on the back of the Gareth Malone thing, and I don't think we should knock it even if the stuff they sing and the standard at which they sing it is pretty middling. Just so long as they don't start giving public concerts and expect people to fork out £15 for a ticket!
At the moment there is plenty of good amateur singing around, with lots of competent chamber choirs. The worry is that these are peopled by a generation that probably did cut their teeth in a good school choir or church choir. So it is worrying that they may be an endangered species.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWith friends like this, who needs enemies?
I picked up a copy of "Life & Living" Summer 2012' and chanced upon the seemingly positive article - Why Singing is Good for You. it began as follows:
"Questionable memories of school choirs may still lurk in the recesses of your mind, but don't be put off. Nowadays choirs thankfully have changed beyond recognition. Today, you're far more likely to be singing Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody than Handel's Halleujah Chorus - and having a huge amount of fun in the process, as Christine Tagg discovered when she joined a choir two years ago."
There is some merit in what follows, but further snide comments are to be found further on.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostEA Don't despair. There is an interest in so-called 'community choirs' to which anyone can turn up irrespective of ability and have a good sing-song. It's partly on the back of the Gareth Malone thing, and I don't think we should knock it even if the stuff they sing and the standard at which they sing it is pretty middling. Just so long as they don't start giving public concerts and expect people to fork out £15 for a ticket!
At the moment there is plenty of good amateur singing around, with lots of competent chamber choirs. The worry is that these are peopled by a generation that probably did cut their teeth in a good school choir or church choir. So it is worrying that they may be an endangered species.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostEA Don't despair. There is an interest in so-called 'community choirs' to which anyone can turn up irrespective of ability and have a good sing-song. It's partly on the back of the Gareth Malone thing, and I don't think we should knock it even if the stuff they sing and the standard at which they sing it is pretty middling.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's not what they sing, so much as the utterly negative attitude about really great classical music that has infected our society.
if one conflates taste with value then the folks who drone on about how wonderful Beethoven is simply because it IS BEETHOVEN are doing exactly the same thing that you are complaining about.
What is encouraging IMV is that amongst young people music is far less "tribal" than it was when I was a teenager
I'm sure "great classical music" (whatever your version of this is ?) can cope
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