A choir is greater than any individual singer but needs 'em all

  • [this is a version of a post which first appeared on my blog From the Front of the Choir]

     

    Obvious really, but a choir is a large organism made up of lots of individuals who are working together.

     

    Birds on a wire

     

    The Tenor by Amyn Kassam

     

    Part of the joy is to be part of something greater than oneself.

     

    all for one and one for all!

    Each singer has the responsibility to sing their part well, and yet the overall sound doesn’t depend on any one singer. Each singer is as vitally important as the next. The effectiveness of a choir lies in the ability to balance these, apparently contradictory, requirements.

     

    Often less-confident choir members stand at the back singing quietly (I’ll be writing about this next week), thinking that it doesn’t really matter what they do as they’re not really that important (but see Everybody has a place in the choir). Yet if all the singers thought that, there would be no choir at all!

     

    The less-confident singers believe that if they don’t turn up for a concert, it won’t make any difference, yet at the same time they believe that if they make a mistake it will spoil the whole sound of the choir.

     

    So there is a fine balance between each singer being of equal importance, and yet the final result doesn’t depend on any single individual’s contribution. Somewhat of a paradox.

     

    it all comes out in the mix

    I often get singers coming up to me after a rehearsal to tell me that somebody next to them has been singing the tune incorrectly, or that within their part there were several versions being sung at the same time. Usually I haven’t noticed this at all!

     

    Standing out front it is my responsibility to get the overall sound right.

     

    Since the choir is a large group of people, any small imperfections tend to disappear in the mix. Yet the resulting sound is a combination of the wide range of different vocal qualities involved and the sum of all the tiny differences in tuning, notes sung, voice placement and quality, etc. If a different combination of singers were involved, the overall sound would be somewhat different.

     

    singing is an expression of humanity

    It is that expression of individuals’ humanity shining through that can make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. It is the quality that singers of ‘traditional’ music often bring when they sing as part of their everyday work or ritual rather than as a special performing group.

     

    Sometimes I think we lose sight of that and focus too much on trying to achieve the perfect blend of voices in an attempt to realise the music in a ‘perfect’ way which, of course, is impossible (see Music lives in flawed humans and not on the page).

     

     

     

    Chris Rowbury: chrisrowbury.com

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