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my first performance in thirty years |
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Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Stilly River Sage Date: 16 Mar 23 - 10:58 PM Please report back and tell us how it went. And if someone records for Facebook or posts it on YouTube, a link would be lovely! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: GUEST,keberoxu Date: 19 Mar 23 - 06:06 PM Well, both performances are over, and both were sung to a packed house, with more people than seats, some were standing along the wall. The audience applauded warmly and participated in the singalong part. The experience was fulfilling yet tiring. Of interest to Mudcatters: the teenage girls' chorus sang "The Parting Glass" in an arrangement by the Wailin' Jennys (three-part harmony). The skits and jokes went down well also. One of the funny songs was "Who Put the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy's Chowder?" THe children's chorus sang that one, along with the Unicorn song. Good grief, I almost printed Unicron song -- pandemic misspelling. Speaking of pandemic: THis event would be considered a super-spreader, packed to the walls as the hall was. I don't know the auditorium's capacity, it was of course on the small side. Only a handful of people, mostly older people, wore facemasks; the rest savored their liberty from facemasks, plainly. The adult chorus sang: Deep Peace Salley Gardens Danny Boy Black is the Color of my True Love's Hair A Gaelic Good Night (an Irish room blessing) And the dance-school troupe of student Irish step-dancers brought the house down. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Stilly River Sage Date: 19 Mar 23 - 09:03 PM Sounds beautiful! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: JennieG Date: 19 Mar 23 - 09:11 PM Sounds like a great concert - well done you, and well done to all the performers! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: leeneia Date: 19 Mar 23 - 11:36 PM It sounds like a wonderful concert, keb. We are all proud of you. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 20 Mar 23 - 03:29 AM I'll second that!! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: GUEST,Mark Date: 20 Mar 23 - 05:55 AM I'm a little late to the party. First, congratulations on finding some rewarding outlets for your talents. Long may it continue. I'm much the same age as you and rather frustrated at the moment that I don't have such an outlet. Then two things about the "Trout". 1) Many years ago I took my eldest son to one of Hilary James' and Simon Mayor's "Musical Mystery Tour" shows, and after that all my children got great pleasure from their cassettes (I said it was many years ago). One cassette included this wonderful treatment of the "Trout Quintet" with non-Schubertian lyrics The Slippery Slimy Trout - hopefully some others will also enjoy it. 2) More recently we got a Samsung Washing Machine and also a Tumble Drier from the same manufacturer. When they finish a cycle, they play a short burst of the "Trout" which always makes me laugh and break into Simon's song... |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 20 Mar 23 - 08:38 AM my washing machine just BEEPS, but as it's dying I might look for a new one that plays music! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Donuel Date: 26 Mar 23 - 09:56 PM Good on you Keb. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: keberoxu Date: 25 May 23 - 07:13 PM The same amateur chorus, with which I performed on the weekend of St. Patrick's Day with the Irish theme, is performing in the next ten days. This time it is "ein Deutsches Requiem" by Brahms, with soloists and a very full orchestra. So full, in fact, that the chorus director has a little anxiety about the chorus not being full enough to match. A bigger chorus would be more standard towards a performance of this piece. But we are going to attempt it anyway. The performance will be on a Sunday afternoon, the first Sunday in June, and although the performance is indoors, I am hoping that the weather will cooperate. I'm having to pace myself carefully in rehearsing the Brahms and most probably in the performance to come. For one thing, I don't have the high notes that I used to have, and I am singing second soprano. There are places where I simply lip-sync and let the other second sopranos carry the line without me. It's a dirty trick, but it works. The Brahms Requiem is seven movements long and lasts over one hour. So I feel justified in doing whatever I have to in order to not burn out my singing voice. This coming week, we will have a piano rehearsal on Memorial Day evening, and then there will be rehearsals every other day, two of them with the orchestra; the performance is two days after the last rehearsal. I hope the experience is a happy one. There is good reason to be hopeful of this. It's still a big undertaking and if I am honest, I have a little fear about how all of us are going to get through it. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Helen Date: 25 May 23 - 07:20 PM Sandra, we recently bought a new musical washing machine too. It's kinda fun. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Helen Date: 25 May 23 - 07:22 PM And keberoxu, I hope your performance goes well. Even the lip-syncing. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Stilly River Sage Date: 25 May 23 - 09:49 PM Keb, a friend of mine in New York City loved to sing with groups. He was active with at least one barbershop quartet. We were both park rangers at Ellis Island, and one day he came out with his group and the stood on the balcony of the Great Hall and sang a couple of songs. The acoustics were amazing! Brooklyn has a robust Norwegian population and he also performed with a Norwegian male choir. In my part of the Puget Sound where many Scandinavians settled there were lots of these groups, and I heard a few as a kid. I went to a concert Joe performed in and it was like seeing all of my cousins and great uncles there on stage - tall, thin, pale Norwegian men. The fact that my friend was a fairly brown skinned, black haired Italian meant that he was the raisin in the oatmeal up there. And after the concert he said they surprised him by listing a song he hadn't practices, so he did the lip sync thing the whole time. We wouldn't have known if he didn't tell us. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: keberoxu Date: 01 Jun 23 - 04:36 PM We had our first rehearsal in the concert hall, with the orchestra. Nobody warned us that the hall would have the air-conditioning and the fan going the whole time. It was so cold and drafty in there! I was thankful that I had brought a jacket and worn shoes and socks, even though the daytime had had sandals temperatures. The orchestra is in front of the chorus, and the conductor is in front of the orchestra -- so there is a distance onstage between conductor and chorus. That was enough to disorient some of the chorus members, who are used to being up close and personal. The Brahms Requiem sounds so beautiful with the orchestra! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: GUEST,keberoxu Date: 03 Jun 23 - 06:46 PM Last night we had our final rehearsal, which was long and tiring, my energy flagging the whole time. Then when rehearsal ended and we headed from the concert hall for our parked cars, the heavens opened up and the rain absolutely poured down. The rain was in the forecast, so I had come prepared (umbrella, waterproof footwear), but many of my fellow chorus members were totally unprepared for rain. It had been such a hot day -- triggering these thunderstorms -- and the road pavements were steaming in the rain, looked like fog. |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Stilly River Sage Date: 03 Jun 23 - 10:49 PM I'm glad you got to hear the chorus with the orchestra - when there's an audience it will be more exhilarating. Enjoy the experience! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: keberoxu Date: 05 Jun 23 - 06:40 PM Well, the Brahms Requiem has been performed. It was yesterday. The day was very cold for the first Sunday in June, and some of us turned up wearing winter coats over our concert blacks. But at least there was no rain, and the sun came out. The performance went very well, I think. It's hard to tell how it actually sounds when you are in the thick of it. We choristers were behind the orchestra, and the orchestra was facing away from us, toward the audience. So we literally did not hear what the audience heard. But what I could hear sounded good. I can't say it was a transporting experience for me. No, I was working hard the whole time, more perspiration than inspiration, for certain. Watching the conductor's baton, glancing at the musical score and turning pages, taking deep breaths in the right places, spitting out all that German diction . . . in the meantime the soles of my feet went somewhat numb from standing for the better part of forty-five minutes before there was a place where the chorus could sit down for a time. The hall had a few empty seats but it was largely filled, and it's a large hall. So we had a good turnout, and we were warmly applauded, you can't ask for more from the audience (they listened very attentively, with no disruptions). Afterwards I met up with a dear friend and we went out for cups of hot chocolate at a nearby cafe. Then I went home and collapsed! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: JennieG Date: 06 Jun 23 - 12:29 AM Well done, keberoxu - you certainly earned the hot chocolate and the collapse after that! |
Subject: RE: my first performance in thirty years From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 06 Jun 23 - 06:10 AM as person with chronic lower back & leg pain, I salute you! In the 90s a friend sang in classical choir with an injured foot which she propped on a brick or something to lift it up. |
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