Monday, November 24, 2025

Why getting it wrong is the best way to learn

A couple of things this week reminded me how important mistakes are when learning something new.

photo by N i c o l a

One was performer, song leader and composer Brendan Taaffe’s substack: The most important thing you can do is fail”, and the other was a workshop I attended on Voice, Body and Rhythm with Helen Chadwick and Tania Bosak.

Monday, November 17, 2025

“You’ll enjoy it when you get there” — why growth always feels uncomfortable

I’m attending a three-day workshop this weekend and I’m feeling nervous.

It’s a common feeling when stepping into the unknown. But I’ve been to countless workshops before — so what’s going on?

Monday, November 10, 2025

Can people find and contact your choir easily?

There was a choir I needed to contact recently. I knew their name and where they’re based, but I couldn’t find their contact details anywhere online.

Is your choir easy to find and contact?

Monday, November 03, 2025

No mailing list? You’re missing out on singers!

If you don’t have a mailing list for people interested in your choir or singing workshops, you’re missing a trick.

It’s the easiest and most powerful way to recruit singers.

Monday, October 27, 2025

When the song you know isn’t quite the same: Tips for re-learning variations

Sometimes I teach a song at a workshop that some singers already know.

Image generated by Gemini AI

Invariably it will be a different arrangement. So how can singers approach re-learning a version that has only slight variations?

Monday, October 20, 2025

Don’t stagnate: there is always something new to learn and discover

I was trying to come up with an idea for this week’s blog post, but everything I thought of I’d already written about!

Image generated by Gemini AI

For a moment, I started to worry that I’d run out of things to say about choirs and singing. Surely that can’t be true — can it?

Monday, October 13, 2025

Why singing feels easier in workshops than in choir rehearsals

When I lead a one-off singing day or weekend, I’m always amazed at how many songs I’m able to teach — and how quickly singers pick them up.

This is in stark contrast to weekly choir rehearsals which are often harder work and far less productive. So what’s going on here?