Originally posted by subcontrabass
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The BBC Singers in C & O Magazine
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Originally posted by jean View PostI wonder how regularly a group of singers has to sing together before they constitute a choir.
Dull sublunary choirs probably rehearse together once a week, and none of them fulfil solo engagements.
The objection often raised to the BBC singers is that they sound like soloists and don't produce a choral 'sound', but do they rehearse together any less than (say) the Tallis Scholars, whose members also have other lives as soloists?
The Tallis Scholars are a project choir so each concert, or tour, or recording, is undertaken by whichever singers are available to be booked for that project, drawn from a small pool of regulars, with quite a few members more or less taking part in everything they do.
Originally posted by jean View PostBoth groups, and any group of singers at a music college, presumably need far less rehearsal than the rest of us.
Things have obviously moved on since I started doing student composer workshops with the BBC Singers (neither the RNCM or the RCM had chamber choirs then) but the work we do with them remains invaluable in that the practical advice and input they get from experienced professionals is something they cannot get elsewhere, and (for whatever reason) often remains the only opportunity they have to hear their pieces for voices realised (this also goes for Oxford students); some of them, of course, can only be sung well by a group like the BBC Singers in any case. (The singers sight-read everything in these sessions.)
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Originally posted by BasilHarwood View PostI know TCM Chamber Choir (dir. Stephen Jackson, a collegue of GJ's as he's also chorus master of the BBCSO) rehearse twice a week and perform very, very frquently; seemingly more so than any of the other college that runs a chamber choir.
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Originally posted by Stephen Smith View PostI was lucky enough to be present when David Willcocks conducted a concert by the RCM chamber choir in honour of Herbert Howells on an anniversary (not sure which one) - H H was very elderly.
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