In my experience, when it comes to moving and singing at the same time, men seem to find it hardest.
Why is this, and are there ways to help?
In my experience, when it comes to moving and singing at the same time, men seem to find it hardest.
Why is this, and are there ways to help?
When I ran community choirs, I used to insist that singers stood during rehearsals. But some complained that their legs ached by the end of the evening.
Now I usually get people to sit for singing sessions. But recently some singers have complained because they prefer to stand! Is there a middle way to keep everybody happy.
If you’re a choir member, or thinking of starting a choir, you might imagine that all choir and workshop leaders have extremely ordered lives.
In my case, that’s absolutely not true!
I’ve seen several online videos recently of choirs using simple, fun songs as warm-ups.
It looks harmless enough. But some of these songs have dubious content, which I’m sure the choirs weren’t aware of. Even so, it’s our responsibility to check sources thoroughly.
At a choral concert there is usually someone standing in front of the singers waving their arms about.
But what are they actually doing, and is there really any need for them to be there?