Unfair to amateur choirs?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Posthttps://www.classicfm.com/music-news...ovid-guidance/
One very good small amateur choir near us was due to sing CE at Gloucester later in the year. The visit has just been cancelled.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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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhat is deemed to be the difference between an amateur and a professtional choir in this context?
There was a council of war with various distinguished choir directors yesterday, but it doesn't look as if the Government will back down, so amateur choirs will have to wait for a month for any possibility of change. There is a petition at https://www.change.org/p/department-...al-well-being? which has at the time of writing over 11,000 signatures. It will not reverse the current situation, but it will show DCMS that the objections do not come from a handful of people - and maybe remind them that most of the people who signed the petition have a vote.
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostIt is not just that the professional choir members are paid (otherwise churches etc. could just pay a nominal fee to everyone in their choirs). Previously I saw a definition to do with the kind of insurance the singers held, determining whether they are professional.
There was a council of war with various distinguished choir directors yesterday, but it doesn't look as if the Government will back down, so amateur choirs will have to wait for a month for any possibility of change. There is a petition at https://www.change.org/p/department-...al-well-being? which has at the time of writing over 11,000 signatures. It will not reverse the current situation, but it will show DCMS that the objections do not come from a handful of people - and maybe remind them that most of the people who signed the petition have a vote.
Public health principles for reducing the spread of respiratory infections, including COVID-19, in the workplace.
Yes, please sign the petition. And also write to your MP if you will. Current oscillations over the variant spread etc leave the June unlocking date in some doubt.....
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostIt is not just that the professional choir members are paid (otherwise churches etc. could just pay a nominal fee to everyone in their choirs). Previously I saw a definition to do with the kind of insurance the singers held, determining whether they are professional.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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Originally posted by french frank View PostYes, but why are they treated differently in terms of these restrictions?
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Knowing that there is a Parliament Choir for singing-minded MPs and anyone else who is based in the Palace of Westminster, I thought they might have some fellow-feeling in this matter. But it seems that I am mistaken. Their website states (in rather small typeface) that their rehearsals 'are currently taking place online.' It's a solution for the tech-savvy, I guess, but I cannot believe that it would suit everyone.Last edited by W.Kearns; 20-05-21, 19:40.
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Originally posted by mopsus View PostI imagine the argument is that the singers are not being deprived of income, unlike professionals. Of course their professional conductors and accompanists may be, although some choirs have agreed to pay their pros the same fee as if all rehearsals had gone ahead.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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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut the restrictions are public health rules, not economic ones. Professional choirs don't have some sort of automatic immunity so don't need to bother about the public health concerns.
You can find discrepancies in any area of life.
To be fair, which I'm not really in the mood to be, I suspect that " one size fits all" regulations are likely to be at least as unsatisfactory as tailored ones in the current situation where government sees fit to intervene at every level. But one's view probably is affected significantly by perception of risk in specific areas, and one's wider view on how such risk might be mitigated.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Bizarrely, brass band rehearsals ARE allowed to happen from this week so long as the distancing and ventilation rules that any choirs who were able to get together last autumn are followed. I understood that there was very little difference between aerosol production through wind and brass instruments and singing.
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The choir I'm in had its first rehearsal yesterday, in a Dutch barn, with wide spacing of singers. It was wonderful to be able to get back to real live group singing.
The official discrimination against singers verges on the absurd. When you speak, you breath in and out all the time, with no thought of how much air you are expelling. When you sing, you conserve air in order to sing long phrases (usually to reach the next comma or rest), so air is expelled from the lungs much more slowly than when you're speaking. The 'powers that be' don't understand this simple thing.
I play the oboe, which requires so little air that I have been know to play for up to 90 seconds in a single breath. On a flute, long phrases are more difficult to control, but in the end, it's very much like singing with regard to breath control.
They allow people into football matches now, with fans shouting - which means frequent very rapid airspeed.
I know Boris is a scarecrow, but nevertheless, I thought he must have a brain.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe choir I'm in had its first rehearsal yesterday, in a Dutch barn, with wide spacing of singers. It was wonderful to be able to get back to real live group singing.
The official discrimination against singers verges on the absurd. When you speak, you breath in and out all the time, with no thought of how much air you are expelling. When you sing, you conserve air in order to sing long phrases (usually to reach the next comma or rest), so air is expelled from the lungs much more slowly than when you're speaking. The 'powers that be' don't understand this simple thing.
I play the oboe, which requires so little air that I have been know to play for up to 90 seconds in a single breath. On a flute, long phrases are more difficult to control, but in the end, it's very much like singing with regard to breath control.
They allow people into football matches now, with fans shouting - which means frequent very rapid airspeed.
I know Boris is a scarecrow, but nevertheless, I thought he must have a brain.
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The application of a rule of six to choirs in itself shows how little understanding this bunch have of the way choirs work. Anybody who thinks petitions etc will make any difference is deluded, I'm afraid. What would make a difference, you can be sure, is if choral singing made any great contribution to GDP. In that case, covid would of course work completely differently...
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Originally posted by EnemyoftheStoat View PostThe application of a rule of six to choirs in itself shows how little understanding this bunch have of the way choirs work. Anybody who thinks petitions etc will make any difference is deluded, I'm afraid. What would make a difference, you can be sure, is if choral singing made any great contribution to GDP. In that case, covid would of course work completely differently...
Has anyone seen any explanation/justification for the discrimination? I can't help wondering if it's a combination of ignorance of what is known so far about aerosols and inability to make a competent and accurate assessment of comparative risk. In that case a petition with large numbers of signatures might enable (yet another) u-turn without the dreaded loss of face along the lines of "we have reviewed the evidence blah blah". Does it all disappear after June 21st - if that happens?
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