From Brigid: lead-in to rehearsal 3

Hi, folks

Nothing radically different this week (other than this whole Zoom-world is new!). I did a BCCF workshop on Saturday which we labelled as Zoom 101, for choir-director newbies on Zoom (I call them Zoom virgins), and the whole process of writing it out and working out what needed to be covered codified for me many of the things we’ve been finding in our first couple of sessions, mainly:
• Zoom rehearsals cannot be standard rehearsals, and if we expect that, we’re bound to be disappointed - but....
• Zoom sessions can enable us to do all sorts of things that we could probably never get to doing in the regular way, and we need to make the most of that.

There is information out about a platform called JackTrip which holds much hope for dealing with the latency issue. However, it’s not available yet, it will probably need that everyone has new software, and possibly hardware, and though they talk about it costing very little, I’m not holding my breath!

Phoenix - “Part of this World” - there is no click-track; Nicholle wants us to work with the track we have, and trust to instinct! I understand that that’s scary for some people, and it’s quite OK to decide not to do the recording – but we will spend some time on it this week and next. Think of it as karaoke; you sing karaoke, not aiming for perfection, but to give a good imitation of the song you know. As Don said last week, repetition is key in this situation. The great schools of music training – Orff, Kodaly, Suzuki and Dalcroze – are all based on “do it again!” We are asked to sing what is printed, and not Emily’s mistake. However it’s all very tonal, and if you make a mistake, it probably won’t show.

New music: I have a few things from an organization in the UK called Choir Community – very much geared towards helping community choirs, especially in this “sing at home” time. We’ll take a look at “Sing for Joy”. In the interest of less copying, I’d suggest you print off the Choir-Only version, but I’ve given you the full score as well, for those who have to see the accompaniment. We’ll work it a bit on Tuesday night, and then I’ll post part-predominant recordings for you so you can work on it by yourselves. It’s a bit schmaltzy, but there’s some good singing technique to apply.

September 22 & 29 are “regular” (whatever that is), then October 6 will be a cross-Canada musical tour, with some singing and some listening. Fingers crossed, I hope we may be able to do a hybrid rehearsal on October 13, with some folks in-person at Fraserview, and some being live-streamed at home. There are still things to be worked out for this – protocol details, tech issues and so on. We have established “bubbles” (people who see each other regularly, and don’t need to distance) of
• Bill, Rick & Anna
• Brian, Anne & Anne H
• Susan & Paul
• Amy & Roxanne
I need to know if there is anyone else wanting to rehearse live who already “bubbles” together. Once those groups are established I will plan to set up 5-6 “pods”. A bubble doesn’t need to distance from each other, but a pod does need to distance – and a pod might be made up of a bubble (sitting together) and 3-4 others (sitting at min. 2 metres distance). I need to know if there is anyone with whom you want to pod. Bear in mind that these groups will remain the same anytime we rehearse in-person. I am not going to try and vocally balance pods; we have only 3 tenors and I’m not going to break them up. Pods will probably mostly be one section – sopranos with two pods, altos with one – and just a little mixing. So again, time to think about whether you’d like to be with a mix or just with your section. A few people said “maybe” to live rehearsal - Wendy, HeatherK, Kate, Chris – can you let me know? Just be comfortable with your decision, because I’d rather not move folk in and out....

I have been asked about masks – specifically about Singers Masks, which have more space in front of the mouth, and are kept in place by some sort of stiffening – zip-ties or horsehair or wire or whatever. You can talk to Kate, Susan O and Cathy B, all of whom have made masks, using the pattern created by Joan Fearnley in Ottawa. There are a series of YouTube videos, but I think it’s Joan’s Version 3 that has been most successful - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UNTP-m_K4E

You’ll also find extensive discussions on Facebook under Masks for Performers. It’s a private group – let me know if you have problems getting in, and I’ll contact Joan.

There are a couple of commercial variants:
MyMusicFolders sells The Resonance Singers Mask:
https://www.mymusicfolders.com/product-category/covid-19-supplies/
The Broadway Relief Project has a similar one:
https://www.broadwayreliefproject.com/singersmask

If you don’t want to make one yourself, and you don’t want to pay US prices for the commercial ones, you could try the 3D Mask made by one of the singers in Phoenix Chamber Choir – it’s not as wired as the others, but it has the fullness that allows for singing space. https://masksforsale.paperform.co/
Barbra makes three styles – it’s the 3rd, the 3D, that you want. All her proceeds go to support an Abbotsford food bank program.
Fabiana Katz swears by the little plastic/silicone face bracket that can be worn under a mask, over mouth and nose – I think they probably come from China and you have to order them from Amazon or Etsy.

Is someone willing to be Doorkeeper this Tuesday, please? - stay on top of the Waiting Room, check folks off (and give me the list afterwards), monitor Chat, etc

Susan O & Elizabeth: Likely no sectionals this week – but probably Sept 29....

Reminder: 7pm start – so I’ll open up around 6:40pm. At the end of the rehearsal anyone who wants can get themselves a drink and stay around for an Afterglow at a virtual O’Hares....

See you Tuesday

Brigid

Quick reminder...

Hi, folks I wasn't going to do this, but just in case there are any of you who haven't yet signed up for the Members' Blog or aren't checking the Members section of the website.... (hint, hint - please do!)

The rehearsal this week is at 7:00pm - by request.

We'll do it for a few weeks, and if it's too hard for people to be there at 7pm, we'll switch back. I'll open the Zoom Room at 6:40pm.

Sad to tell you that both Kevin Yue and Andrew Blackmore have stepped back - I suspect they're over-Zoomed, with work...

A reminder to get your music ready this week - how you do it is up to you: save it for posting on a separate tablet or screen, or print it off for putting in a binder - whatever works. We will take a first look this week at the piece for Phoenix's Virtual Choir. You do NOT have to do the recording, but we'll use the music for some work on reading skills together - lots of little rhythm things to sort out!

See you for singing on Tuesday

Brigid

From Brigid: after the first rehearsal...

Ooookay... that was interesting! Steep learning curve all around.

What have I learned?
• I must plan to do less in rehearsal, because working like this will take up more time
• I must time myself when doing prep, and allow leeway for tech difficulties
• I must not try and do too many fancy Zoomie things at once. Breakout rooms and screen-sharing are enough right now – white-board will happen, but not yet
• I still need to work out my “studio” in terms of accessing things

What have you learned? (I hope!)
• This is not choir as we want it – but it’s an interesting alternative!
• We CAN do this Zoom thing! (and help is available – Charles: cpcohen1945@yahoo.com – and probably other folks...)
• singing against a recording means that your next-door singers are not making mistakes and putting you off!
• If you decide that the music is too hard to sing, and you just want to listen, that’s OK!

It’s YOUR responsibility to get your music ready before the rehearsal – whether you’re reading it off a tablet (Kate saved it as a book and just paged through!) or you print it and put it in a binder. I need both hands for the keyboard – I don’t have a spare one for scrolling up and down a screen-share.

I’ve added the Phoenix Virtual Choir piece to the collection – the plan is that all the visitors sing the melody and Phoenix does the backup, but anyone who wants to learn the harmony and record it is welcome to do so.
With it I have posted an info letter (Phoenix CC VC letter) from Administrator Emily Zuidema telling you more about the project. Also HERE. Please note deadline date: Sunday 4 October.
We have 3 Tuesdays to tidy this up and can talk about it in more detail.

On the first Tuesday of each month I propose to focus on a SING – not so much rehearsing, as singing through something many of us know. Those who don’t, have options of listening, vocalizing, or singing melody rather than harmony.
October’s SING will be Canadiana; I’ve had a few requests, and I’m going to set a deadline of Sunday 27 September for any others.
I’m going to suggest November’s SING (Nov 3) will be the Faure Requiem, if I can work out how to get music out to you, and December’s SING (Dec 1) will be Christmas portions of Messiah.

Please contact me if you have any questions, and if I can’t answer them, I’ll try and find someone who can!

See you all on Tuesday 15 September!

Brigid

From Brigid: Here We Go! - Administrivia

Hi, folks

On count-down now, to a new season, and with no idea how it’s going to shape! We’re all learning together – and I keep saying to myself, ANYTHING we do is better than not singing at all....

Administrivia stuff: I’m going to post any materials I need you to get on the ROCA members section of the website – some of it will be stand-alone, and some will give you links to GoogleDocs. All YOU need to do is know how to access the website:

  • find www.roca.ca

  • scroll down to the black section at the bottom of the page, and click on MEMBER LOGIN

  • password is ROCAisgr8 (ROCA is great!)

It’s not fixed yet, so don’t rush to it! Let’s call it a Labour Day project for you...

Bernie’s writing a President’s Welcome, and will have info about membership registration and so on in that. However, I will reinforce that if you are able to make a further donation to ROCA at this, or any, time, it would be MOST appreciated. This is going to be a deficit season... :(

We will have some non-member guests joining us and offering a donation in place of a fee. Some may attend regularly, and others will be drop-ins.

There is a LOT for me to do to make a Tuesday evening come together, and I’d really appreciate some help from you. What I need are

  • A couple of tech-savvy people who can trouble-shoot Zoom and other electronic issues, and be resource people for those who aren’t Zoom-savvy; screen-share, music share etc as needed

  • A door-keeper for each rehearsal, to let people in from the waiting room and check attendance – this could be rotated

  • A guest-host, to look out for visitors or new people and make sure they’re included

  • A PEOPLE section-leader for each section to lead sectional discussions, do follow-up with missing bodies etc Let’s count tenors and basses together...

  • a MUSIC section-leader for each section to do sectional rehearsals in breakout rooms. I’m going to suggest

    • sopranos – Susan Ohannesian

    • altos – Elizabeth Oh

    • tenors/basses – Brigid

but if there’s anyone else who wants to step in here...

If you can help, please check back to the first sheet of the GoogleDocs file you had – I’ve edited the bottom of the page for sign-ins....

Two more things – and then I’ll leave everything to discussion time on Tuesday

  1. one of the things we’ll probably do is to revisit past repertoire favourites. There’s a list in the Member Zone under Sheet Music of EVERYTHING we’ve sung since 1994. If there are things you’d love to sing again, let me know.
    Sometimes that’s easy – I can pdf a copy so you all have access (which is OK if we have a full set in the library), or we may be able to find an online access. Sometimes it may mean that we have to work out pickup /dropoff depots, or trust to Canada Post, so we’ll need to give Kate lots of warning. Someone on Tuesday asked to sing Missa Gaia again....

  2. we’ll discuss the Virtual Choir recording option, but I’m going to suggest that we take part in Phoenix Chamber Choir’s upcoming project, which is being thrown open. Once we get to recording, you can decide for yourself if you want to submit it.... It’s a parody of the Disney song “Part of your world”
    We want to be where the people are

    We wanna to sing, wanna sing together

We miss our friends in our (Whad'ya call 'it?) oh - choir"

See you Tuesday on Zoom for singing and discussion!

Brigid

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/95350781933?pwd=Y1NSQld3QTVROCtVUUdZMzZONnVIQT09

Meeting ID: 953 5078 1933 / Passcode: SATB

Something like this....

7-7:30pm drop in when you’re ready

7:30pm we start!

Vocal technique; Non Nobis Domine

7:50pm welcomes and introductions; random breakout rooms for discussion

8:10pm We Are One – reminder – follow with recording

8:15pm break for movement, bathroom, tea, chat....

8:30pm in plenary session, synthesize what came from discussion

8:45pm sectional breakout rooms – do some note-work

8:55pm We Are One – with recording

done at 9pm; drop out then or any time after; the Zoom room will be open till 9:30pm

From Brigid: Individual Equipment and Other Stuff

Needs for Season Covid-19: 2020-2021

Mask

If you plan to do any in-person singing, you should have a mask. (If you plan only to sing from home, it’s not an issue)

Depending on space and ventilation it may not be required by me, and in that case you will always have the right to wear it. If wearing a mask is required by Fraserview, then we will mask.

Your mask should be well-fitting, comfortable for wear for the length of a rehearsal. It should not be such a close seal as an N-95 medical mask, but it should fit closely so that there is no free passage of air round the edges. A face-shield is not an acceptable substitute, unless you have one that closes at the back and the bottom.

You may decide if it is a shaped mask or one sewn with pleats for fit. It should not be so loose-fitting that when you breathe in, the mask collapses inwards. Both Kate and Cathy have a pattern for a “performers mask”, extended beyond the front of the face by the use of zip-ties.

Decide in good time how it fastens – whether you want to deal with elastics round your ears, or straps/tapes.

If we rehearse in person, it will likely be for shorter periods, so you will be able to go outside for some fresh air, and change your mask if you prefer.

Computer

Phone or tablet is possible, but we will be doing things that may need you to read music from a screen-share, and that’s a little rough with a phone screen! Laptop recommmended.

A/V

Headphone or earbuds will help to filter out external sound – your choice. A microphone will improve your sound, though depending on your system, you may manage perfectly well with the system mic. If we ever got to creating a virtual choir recording, you would need one system to play the foundation recording & click-track, and another to record on (I would play it on my computer and record on my phone). Most people have an in-system web-cam – but with an older computer, you may need an external one.

Keyboard

I know not everyone has keyboard skills, but this is a good time to develop that aspect of learning to work on your music. You don’t need to become a great pianist, but you can learn enough to help yourself. If you don’t have a piano at home, think about getting an electronic keyboard. It doesn’t need to be a full-88-key one, nor does it need a wide range of sounds. You can probably find something pretty cheap on MarketPlace or Craigslist. Just make sure it works before you buy it!

Space

This may be less easy – your family’s been used to you leaving for choir, and now you may be staying home for some of the time. Find a space where you can stand and sing, and still see the computer screen (and have the camera seeing you). Make sure the keyboard is within reach and the lighting is good. (I have invested in a Ring Light on a tripod – a very even light-source)

Have an upright chair that allows you to have good singing posture – be in camera range (even if the means you have to move the camera). I will probably be asking you to stand for warmups and for vocal training, but let you choose for other things.

If you live in an apartment consider how sound carries and whether you can mitigate that with screens, carpeting or anything like that. (This will be an issue for me, and I will need to negotiate with my next-door neighbours.)

Timing

We’ve been used to a two-hour, fairly hard-working rehearsal every Tuesday, with a concert goal in sight. Now we have no calendar goal, and two hours on Zoom will give us all Zoom-brain. I plan to work for no more than 90 minutes – perhaps less, we’ll have to see how we feel – and when we end, to leave open mic for visiting and chat for those who want.

Live rehearsal

When I first wrote this, it was looking less and less likely – but research IS happening, and we’ll see what it tells us.

WE WILL ONLY REHEARSE LIVE IF WE CAN DO SO SAFELY

If we rehearse live it will be no more than twice a month, and we will find a way of live-streaming or at least recording so that those of you at home can also sing with the choir.

Dr Michael Schwandt recommended “bubble” groups of about 6. These groups should be consistent from session to session, for the sake of possible contact tracing. I am hoping that by spacing, say, 6 groups in the pews of Fraserview, that you will hear each other well enough to sing.

Considerations: “best” would be an SATB grouping, with a couple of extra voices. Given that some of our 6 tenors would prefer not to meet in person just yet, that’s not going to happen! Many people may be more comfortable with a single-voice bubble – all sopranos, for instance. Your bubble will likely not be a satisfactory musical unit by itself, though. However, the group as a whole needs to be a sufficiently balanced group, so that we can actually produce a good balanced sound – it won’t work if, for instance, we have only five sopranos singing live, even if all the others are singing at home.

If it’s allowed to us by Fraserview, and if you want to do it, I will help facilitate it; I will not insist that everyone must be there, and we will need to follow all the protocols decreed by the church.

What are the “cons”? For this to work, each bubble would probably need to be mic’d, so that you can hear each other and those at home can hear. It would need good wi-fi to send it for live-streaming for those at home. We would either need to buy/rent equipment, and have someone run it, or pay Fraserview extra to do so.

There are still many questions!

Singing outside

This would not be an option for rehearsal unless everyone could attend, because it’s almost impossible to do the livestream thing.

Just singing for fun, some of us singing at Toby’s farewell discovered the downside of outdoor singing – which is basically that the sound goes nowhere; there’s nothing for it to resonate off, and we can’t hear each other. I’ve been talking to Carrie Tennant (Vancouver Youth Choir) and she’s booked a parkade level at UBC for rehearsal – open space, but with resonance from hard surfaces. She’s also taken small groups of singers into forest area, and says that tree resonance can be an exciting experience – but not a rehearsal situation. If anyone has ideas....

So what can we do?

As you probably know, Zoom is likely the best and most accessible platform we have for now – but it’s not satisfactory for singing together because of latency issues. There is work happening in the US and in Germany but it won’t be with us any time soon. So a lot of what we will do will depend on you developing the comfort with singing at home alone, with my voice coming through, A typical rehearsal might include

  • warm-ups, with me modelling and you singing

  • singing some solo repertoire – this may have to be with recorded accompaniment, since if as accompanist plays live, we would immediately have latency problems. I will need to experiment to see if digital piano, directly into the system, would be better than acoustic piano

  • sight-reading – and tying this into some keyboard basics. We could work with solfege, but I think it’s probably more helpful to know where physical notes are, and to be able to work on intervals

  • Singing some choral repertoire – this would mean some sectional work, and then probably singing against a recording. Re-singing things we know (though that will depend on how long we’ve been with the chorus); learning something new

  • Watching choir performances together, and discussing either the repertoire they sing, or the way they perform

  • perhaps some score study – how to mark your score, how to analyse

  • an occasional fun evening – a singalong, a cabaret session or a mini-concert

Another issue we will have to allow for is that of permissions... currently, when we buy our music, we have the right to sing it, but when we perform it, we have to pay performing rights (which we do through SOCAN). Now we are going to have to be dealing with recording rights, and synch rights if we are live-streaming. Life gets more complicated (and not cheap!)

Virtual Choir

This can only be a part of our choral year, though a number of people have asked about it.

To begin with, Virtual Choir is not really a choral experience – it’s a creation of individual singers welded together by a sound engineer.

1. A foundation track is created; accompaniment and vocal parts, with click-track if needed. Work for me and an accompanist...

2. We learn notes in rehearsal – mostly sectional rehearsal if we’re working in Zoom

3. Singers record themselves individually, playing the foundation track on one appliance and recording on another – for instance, I would play the track on my computer and record on my phone.

4. Tracks are collected and then music and video are separately edited and then compiled. This is NOT a quick process! and not something that I, personally, have time to do.

I’m thinking that if we are able to VC anything, it should be a short Christmas program for seniors residences, since they won’t be able to have visiting groups. We could combine some of the World Christmas CD (from, unbelievably, 15 years ago) with other VC rep, perhaps from our international Christmas program in 2015

There are videos available to tell you how to do the tech of this. I am also working with Vaughn and Carolyn from Phoenix Chamber Choir to offer a couple of BCCF workshops to backup the information in the Phoenix videos. More info at https://bcchoralfed.com/virtualchoir/ If any of you have an interest, please let me know a.s.a.p. If we can’t learn to do it ourselves, then we would need to build a recording tech into our (already strained) budget.

In the meantime, I’m deep in BCCF Roundtable sessions with choirs across the province. We’re all in this together!

Planning continues....

Brigid

From Brigid: August 1

Good morning, folks – happy August! I hope you are all staying well and enjoying the summer, even in this weird time we find ourselves in.

First of all, I want to say a BIG thank-you to Laura, Jennifer and all the folks that set-up for the farewell-to-Toby party last Tuesday. It was so nice to see people in person (though I missed hugs!) and to have some singing together, if not great music :)

Thanks to all of you for your generosity (nearly $1000) we were able to get gift cards for Quality Garden & Pet in Gibsons, for Toby & Kevin to use as they please. They have not yet sold the condo, and will be renting for awhile on the Sunshine Coast until they find THE house. We won’t lose touch – I will probably be asking Toby to record tracks from time to time.

Would people like to do another bring-your-own-picnic event again before we start rehearsals in the fall? Say, Tuesday 1 September?

I’ve attached a thing for your reading – please take time with it. The new season seems a long way away – especially when we don’t know just what we’re planning for. But I’d rather not confront all the tech problems in September, so I’m asking you to think about some of these issues now – especially if you’re not a comfortable Zoomer. It’s going to be our short-term crutch while we learn to sing together again. Please start thinking about how you’ll address some of the issues – and perhaps log in on a Tuesday evening with the usual link. I’ll be there at 7:30pm each Tuesday – I may log off at 8pm if nobody joins me – but it’s a good practice-Zoom option.

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/95350781933?pwd=Y1NSQld3QTVROCtVUUdZMzZONnVIQT09

Meeting ID: 953 5078 1933 / Passcode: SATB

When I sent the questionnaire out back in May, one of the questions was about whether you were prepared to rehearse live or if you would prefer Zoom. Knowing what we know now (and having read the attached first) I need to ask you that question again. Let’s be clear that it’s not either/or – Zoom will have to be our primary vehicle for rehearsal. But part of the question for live rehearsal is both technical and financial, and part of it is your own risk factor, bearing in mind the precautions we will be taking.

So: two questions for a response to this email, please

  • are you interested in a pre-season outdoor gathering on Tuesday 1 September, tbc?

  • are you willing to participate in the “live” part of live-streamed rehearsals (possibly 2 in October, 2 in November), if we can solve the tech problems?

Hoping to hear from you all!

Brigid


From Brigid: Thinking about Fall Rehearsals

I've a lot of things on my mind:  stuff at St Mary's;  all the BCCF workshops, and especially, planning for ROCA in September.   Some things for you to think about for the fall...

We still have no idea what we are formally going to be allowed to do in September. My own line is that we will plan for the worst and hope for the best.

The best would be that we are allowed to sing in person in a limited format – probably small pods of c.6 singers, scattered through the pews at Fraserview. To have this work

  • we would need for this to be OK with Fraserview – i.e. we would need to conform with whatever their protocols required (and they’re not making decisions till September) 

  • we would need to make these rehearsals accessible in virtual mode to all those of you who do not feel safe meeting in person – i.e. we would need to (ideally) livestream or (if necessary) videorecord rehearsals so that the at-homers could still be part of it. There are financial issues here! as well as tech details. These rehearsals would be hard to find rep for, since probably half of our tenor section will be singing at home and therefore not audible to the group.

  • we would need to have our own protocols in place according to the requirements of the health department, and anyone taking part would need to agree to them. That means if we are told we have to mask when we sing, you would have to mask, even if it feels unnecessary to you personally

  • I would be open to you choosing your own pods, according to your comfort level. They would probably be better as sectional groups, but if you want a mixed group, that’s fine. You would remain with the same people in those groups for all in-person rehearsals.

  • We’d need a pianist. Here’s the sad news (for us) – Toby and his partner Kevin are selling their condo and moving to the Sunshine Coast, so Toby won’t be available to us as accompanist any more :( We’ll need to think about how we can celebrate his time with us, virtually! Ideas?

IF this works, I would probably be looking to do it on alternate weeks, so that we’re all on the same footing for Zoom rehearsals.

At worst, we'll be all-Zoom for the fall - not ideal, but better than not singing at all.   Zoom rehearsals will contain elements of

  • vocal training – maybe me, maybe someone else, maybe a recording

  • solo song repertoire – classical song rep, for good singing technique, but also folk songs and other things. Not just singalonga, though – time taken to do some analysis, some reading skills and so on. Song suggestions accepted – I’m starting a list.

  • choral repertoire – much harder to bring off in a Zoom context, but by recording accompaniments and voice-tracks, I can give you a choir to sing against at home. I suspect we’ll focus on things we’ve already done through the first term. Any requests? 

  • The other thing to try here might be prepping for a virtual choir project: learning how to sing against a foundation track and trying to record yourself. This might be worth doing with some Christmas rep – perhaps with an aim to preparing a video to send to the local seniors residences where we won’t be caroling. Virtual choir is not for everybody, and we won’t try anything really challenging unless you’re all up for the challenge

  • listening together to choir performances

    • perhaps for the repertoire – with some historic context, or for simply enjoying the music

    • perhaps for subsequent discussion of the performance – we all know of good and bad performances on YouTube – sometime you learn a lot from watching a bad one!

  • listening to a lecture or a TED talk, and discussing

We might also have the odd cabaret evening, where people have the chance to offer something they’ve been working on. (Anna and Rick, Bill and Sylvia ALWAYS have something they’re working on!). It doesn’t need to be sung – it could be instrumental or a recitation or something.

And we might have the odd singalonga evening, as we did with the Beatles. Jen has already asked about this, and as long as I don’t have to prepare them single-handedly, I’ve a bunch of possible ideas.

I think the important things to remember here is that we are community, and we need to work this out together. We long to be with each other and hear each other’s voices, and yes, Zoom is not at all the same. Sadly, there is not yet any conferencing platform that has truly beaten the latency problem – Jamkazam is probably the best, but not for more than 4-5 people.

But we can be together even when we can’t hear each other, and we will take time to unmute and discuss and be together in words, even when our music doesn’t mesh.

And I think the other important thing to remember is that in the normal way, we are goal-driven; our rehearsals all take place with a concert as the end-product. In this time of COVID-19, we need to change that. The journey itself will be our focus; where we get to in the end doesn’t matter as much as the fact that we travel together, we learn new things, we explore areas in which we may not feel so comfortable, we listen for the voices that we don’t hear, knowing that they are singing with us.

I’m going to start asking Robert Bridson to post these info things in our membership section so you can access them if you mislay them in your inbox. Remember – down to the black border at the bottom of the webpage, click on member login, enter the code ROCAisgr8. I’ve just posted the repertoire list, current to our March concert, if you’re looking to see what we’ve done before and should do again. Christmas is not included in that – I might get to sorting that....

But the next list for you will be one for you to start planning your tech for Zoom rehearsals...

I’m also thinking about how we might do a summer open-air sing somehow, whether informal with guitars, or something that actually has music and perhaps a keyboard... Even masked, it would be fun. Suggestions?  Perhaps talk on Tuesday evening...

Be safe...

Brigid

From Concertmaster Larisa: Support the VSO

Larisa (who frequently performs with the VSO) sends us this message, in case some of you hadn’t heard:

From: Vancouver Symphony Orchestra <concertinfo@vancouversymphony.ca>
Date: March 24, 2020 at 3:56:21 PM PDT
To: lebedamusic@shaw.ca
Subject: Support the VSO — Stream and Share Beethoven's Symphony No. 6

View in browser

For Your Viewing Pleasure

Last weekend, we had the great pleasure of doing our first live-stream performance, featuring the BeethovenFest Finale. 

More than 70,000 virtual audience members, both locally and globally, experienced the joyful sounds of the VSO and people donated more than $16,000 to help keep the music playing. 

We are thrilled to share with you, the new home of our Beethoven's 6th Symphony performance on our YouTube channel.

We're going to release another Beethoven symphony soon, but first, we need your help to unlock the next level on our YouTube account —help us reach our goal of 4000 viewing hours within the next 72 hours!

Beethoven's Symphony No. 6

Please share the link to watch the VSO performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 6 on YouTube and help us hit our goal of 4000 viewing hours.

We need your help now, more than ever before

Our orchestra relies on ticket sales and donations to thrive. 

Now is the perfect time to subscribe to the VSO's 2020/21 season so that we can get back to performing live for you next fall.

Making a donation will help sustain the VSO during these unprecedented times. The arts are at the heart of our society. It is more important than ever to have music to help unite our community.

We thank all of you for your incredible support at this time.

Donate Online

VSO BOX OFFICE

(604) 876-3434customerservice@vancouversymphony.ca  |  www.myVSO.ca

VANCOUVER SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
500-843 Seymour Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 0G4

Share Your Experience @VSOrchestra

#MyVSO #VSO101

  VSO Charitable No.: 119282283 RR0001

The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra does not sell tickets through third party websites, except in the case of vendors who control their own inventory and are authorized to sell tickets on behalf of the VSO, including but not limited to: The Chan Centre at UBC, the Anvil Centre, and the Vancouver Playhouse. If your tickets are purchased through unauthorized third party sites then they may be invalid and entry could be refused.  

AGM Notice: October 15 at 8:30pm

NOTICE OF AGM 2019

The Richmond Orchestra and Chorus

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

Notice is hereby given of the Annual General Meeting of the Society for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2019.

DATE: Tuesday, October 15, 2019

TIME: 8:30pm

PLACE:Fraserview Mennonite Church

11295 Mellis Drive, Richmond, BC, V6X 1L8 

Formal Business:

  1. Call to order

  2. Adoption of the Agenda

  3. Adoption of Minutes of November 2018

Business Arising and Current:

  1. President’s Report

  2. Treasurer’s Report

  3. Artistic Directors’ Reports: Chorus, Orchestra

Election of Board of Directors

Any Other Business

Adjournment

An Evening of Song - February 2, 2019

On February 2, Rowena Bridson (Robert Bridson’s wife) will be performing some of the most beautiful art songs ever written by Schubert and Schumann as well as some lovely arias by Handel and Haydn.  She will also be performing a Rodrigo set of four Spanish songs that look at four different aspects of love.

Featuring:

Rowena Bridson, Soprano
Victoria Smus, Piano

Venue:

West Point Grey United Church
4595 West 8th Avenue, Vancouver

Date and Time:

Saturday, February 2
Time: 7:00PM

TICKETS $20

Poster: Click here