Week 2 and the new members keep rolling in. For some reason this season there seems to be a lot more interest than last year, and there is still one more week to go for potential newbies. I am always interested in finding out how people find out about the Pink Singers, and also why they join us rather than one of the other gay and lesbian choirs in London. It turns out the majority hear about us through Google (no duh!) and our website. Remarkably few have ever heard of us through any other route, and even fewer have come to our concerts. I guess that means lots of room for improvement in terms of self-promotion. As to why people would rather join us than the LGMC or Diversity, or any of the other fledgling choirs for that matter, well, the new members I’ve spoken to seem to think that we seem really friendly and fun (and we are!) and have a good mix of voices and repertoire (which we do!). I’m glad that comes across. At the same time London is large enough to sustain three major LGBT choirs with very different social approaches, management and vocal styles, so really, there is something for everyone.
At the pub yesterday after rehearsal I was speaking to one of the new members, and he was saying that he was amazed at how fast we go through the music. This is in comparison to his old choir which seemed to slog through the pieces. In contrast, I actually find our progress slow going. For a brief period in college I was in the Gilbert and Sullivan society, and you were expected to just pick up the sheet music and start singing – our musical director was horrible in that he’d pick you out if you hit a bum note. It really was needlessly stressful. Thankfully Mladen is a much calmer influence, and is a good combination of firm and fair. In addition to last week’s songs, this week we started learning Hymne a l’amour (refer to video of Edith Piaf at her finest above), You’ll Never Walk Alone (another of Michael’s outstanding arrangements) and Lacrimosa from Jenkins’ Requiem, for a total of six songs in a fortnight. Balancing the needs of different people in the choir, from those who can sight-read music to those who have never seen musical notation before, is a real problem, but I do believe that people who sing have a natural affinity for a melody so pick things up quickly, and the Pinkies do it at a pace which caters to the greatest number of members.
The other news is that Johnathon, whose birthday it was on Friday, has convinced me to join him on a run around the South Bank with the Front Runners. This is after a conversation with another one of the new members who also runs with that group. I used to run competitively, but it has been a while since I did anything of the sort, and I am woefully out of shape. This does sound rather appealing though, and jogging along the South Bank in the cold winter evenings has a certain Rocky Balboa-esque attraction for me. Once it starts raining, of course, all bets are off.
mmm interesting subject
ReplyDeletei do believe we learn the songs fast track, especially for a person like me who dont have a clue about sight reading! i prefer mladen than michael as the latter keeps forgetting there are poeple who dont read music AT ALL!!!
it really shcoks me how we are
given a new piece of music (that most probaly i'v never heard of before) and michal pretends that all pf us starts singing right there and than!! no wander i like sitting next to philip gatter, he's of great help ocz he jsut starts singing and i just follow him!! lol
and yeah,hav to admit, a newbie's season is extrmely crazy and a tad difficult if u dont sight read! especially whne it comes to songs the choir already know! they used to do my headin last season
but a good thing is, we keep practicing and practicing and practiciong so eventually i'v l;earnt them by heart..
and look at me, i'm a fully fledged pinky now! lol
I totally agree that it can be rather off-putting, but I guess it is important to give new people a realistic impression of how we practise. No-one expects us to learn all the music in the space of a single rehearsal, particularly since we perform without sheet music, but at the same time, being in the choir does require a bit of elbow grease.
ReplyDeleteThe good news is that once we have the first few run throughs under our belts, my experience is that we seem to coast along in blissful crappiness until a few weeks before the concert when everyone then pulls their socks up!
We seem to have quite a few more sight-readers this season though. I am sitting in front of the new Ben in the basses, and he is really good...