[The views expressed in this blog are from my personal experiences from 25 years of leading non-auditioned community choirs in the UK, as well as adult singing workshops. My focus is on teaching by ear using a repertoire of songs from traditions across the globe. Your experiences may differ from mine, so do feel free to leave a comment and let's begin a conversation! A version of this article first appeared as a post on my blog From the Front of the Choir]
More and more older singers are in choirs these days. Many of those singers will have some kind of hearing loss.
How can you, as a choir leader, help them? Here is a guest post by Bettina Gellinek Turner*.
You probably know this scenario:
You announce a page or measure number and a rustling and whispering and shuffling of sheet music begins that seems endless until everyone has finally got it. There may still be a false start with some choir members starting at the wrong place. You may be a little annoyed at the time this takes. People don’t seem to listen to you the first time!
In fact, they may be listening but don’t understand you the first time – or the second time – because of hearing loss.
Many older singers, and increasingly, younger ones too, have hearing loss. Most commonly, people experience a loss of hearing in the higher frequencies first. This leads to an inability to distinguish many of the common consonants from each other.
Imagine speech without consonants. It will sound like a foreign language that you don’t speak very well. You hear someone speaking and may catch or guess some words within a sentence but miss many others, so that comprehension is easily lost. Like with any foreign language, if the speaker starts yelling at you this does nothing to increase your comprehension!
Unfortunately, I know exactly what I speak of. I am a long-time choir singer and musician with fairly early hearing loss of unclear origin. I used to hear perfectly, but over the past decade my hearing has declined and I wear two hearing aids. I jokingly say that my hearing is roughly that of a hundred-year-old!
Most hearing aids, as my audiologist tells me, are geared toward improving speech comprehension, not musical activity (other than passive listening). This presents special problems for musicians and singers. Your hearing aids may not (yet) have a digital or automated setting to quickly adjust your hearing to a comfortable level when you are singing in the middle of a group, singing with instrumental accompaniment, or taking verbal directions from the conductor – all within the same timeframe! Technology helps, but is imperfect and does not restore normal hearing, the way that glasses can correct vision.
I have shared my hearing problems with my choir directors and with my neighbouring singers, so that they may assist me if I do not hear or understand quickly enough. Often there is a lag while my brain tries to make sense of something imperfectly heard. I also experiment with where to be positioned in the section or relative to the accompanist, and with the different settings of my hearing aids.
What can you, the choir director, do to help a singer like me? Here are some suggestions which may help:
I do hope you find these hints from Bettina helpful. Do leave a comment to let us know of your own experiences.
* Bettina Gellinek Turner is a German-born American, residing in a small town north of Boston, Massachusetts. She holds a degree in music education from the Folkwang Universität der Künste in Essen, Germany, and a Master of Arts in Expressive Therapy from Lesley University in Cambridge, MA. She is a lifelong enthusiastic choral singer, and the founder and leader of a local hospice/ bedside volunteer singing cooperative called Gentle Voices. She is experiencing a progressive hearing loss that has made participation in choirs and other musical activities difficult. Nevertheless she persists ...
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Chris Rowbury
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