ISLAND CITY CHORUS
GREATER MONTREAL CHAPTER
SPEBSQSA Inc.
The Little Chorus that could!
MINI PITCH
Date:
June 10, 2002 Guest Night Edition|
COMING UP - ROB'S REQUIRED EVENTS* Saturday, February 1, 2003 Great Northern Harmony Workshop with FRED (1999 International Champs) Saturday, March 29, 2003 Annual Show Salle Claude Champagne with Gas House Gang June 29 - July 6, 2003 SPEBSQSA International Convention MONTREAL - Schedule your vacation, now! Saturday, May 29, 2004 Annual Show Salle Claude Champagne with 4 Voices *NOTE: It is your duty to inform Rob as soon as you know you will miss any rehearsal or event. |
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COMING UP - OPTIONAL, BUT FUN and EDUCATIONAL EVENTS June 30 - July 7, 2002 SPEBSQSA International Convention Portland, OR Saturday, August 17, 2002 Wheaton's Annual Corn Boil, Salad/Chocolate Party |
I don't have the time for a hobby. I sing barbershop!
June 10, 2002 Guest Night
We welcome our guests for an evening of fun and song.
Here is the proposed program:
7:00 - 7:30pm A. Guest arrival & process:
Greeter: -Ron Schurman*
Register & badge: -Peter Evans & Al Mahoney
*Greeter will hand out sing-a-long music & welcome package.
B.
Escort guests to seats, males together, woman & children where they can see and hear.7:30 - 7:50 A. Warm up session: -Rob Mance
B.
Male guests will be invited to join chorus on risers for warm up.7:50 - 8:00 Welcoming of guests: -Jerry Silverberg
Greetings from the president: -Alan Mackenzie
Brief intro to our style singing: -Bert Larsen
8:00 - 8:15 Introduction to Director: -Jerry Silverberg
Teach a simple Tag to All: -Rob Mance
8:15 - 9:15 Normal chorus Rehearsal: -Guest in chairs with guest books
9:15 - 9:30 Quartetting: -introduction by Murray Phillips
9:30 - 9:40 Presentation of guest certificates: -Al Mahoney & Jerry Silverberg
9:40 - 9:50 Sing-a-long, guests and chorus: -Rob Mance
9:50 - 10:30 Business, Break
Refreshments: -Peter Evans & Gerald Thorne
10:30 Thank guests for coming -Jerry Silverberg
Origins of Barbershop Harmony
Was barbershop harmony actually sung in barbershops? Why does SPEBSQSA have so many letters? And who was O. C. Cash? |
Was barbershop harmony actually sung in barbershops?
Certainly—and on street corners (it was sometimes called "curbstone" harmony) and at social functions and in parlours. Its roots are not just the white, Middle America of Norman Rockwell's famous painting. Rather, barbershop is a melting-pot product of African-American musical devices, European hymn-singing culture, and an American tradition of recreational music — a tradition SPEBSQSA continues today.
Immigrants to the new world brought with them a musical repertoire that included hymns, psalms, and folk songs. These simple songs were often sung in four parts with the melody set in the second-lowest voice.
Minstrel shows of the mid-1800s often consisted of white singers in blackface (later black singers themselves) performing songs and sketches based on a romanticised vision of plantation life. As the minstrel show was supplanted by the equally popular vaudeville, the tradition of close-harmony quartets remained, often as a "four act" combining music with ethnic comedy that would be scandalous by modern standards.
The "barbershop" style of music is first associated with black southern quartets of the 1870s, such as The American Four and The Hamtown Students. The African influence is particularly notable in the improvisational nature of the harmonization and the flexing of melody to produce harmonies in "swipes" and "snakes." Black quartets "cracking a chord" were commonplace at places like Joe Sarpy's Cut Rate Shaving Parlor in St. Louis, or in Jacksonville, Florida, where, black historian James Weldon Johnson writes, "every barbershop seemed to have its own quartet."
The first written use of the word "barbershop" when referring to harmonising came in 1910, with the publication of the song, "Play That Barbershop Chord"—evidence that the term was in common parlance by that time.
Today, we are accustomed to receiving all forms of music in every home by way of CD, cassette, radio, video and the Internet. In the early 1900s, though, pop music success depended on sales of sheet music to the general public.
The songwriters of Tin Pan Alley made their living by appealing to the needs and tastes of the recreational musician. To become a sheet music hit, songs had to be easily singable by average singers, with average vocal ranges and average control. This called for songs with simple, straightforward melodies, and heartfelt, commonplace themes and images. Music published in that era often included an instrumental arrangement for piano or ukulele, and also a vocal arrangement for male quartet.
The phonograph made it possible to actually hear the new songs coming from Tin Pan Alley. Professional quartets recorded hundreds of songs for the Victor, Edison, and Columbia labels, which spurred sheet music sales. For example, "You're The Flower Of My Heart, Sweet Adeline" captured the hearts of harmony lovers, not simply because it easily adapted to harmony, but also because it was heavily promoted by the popular Quaker City Four and other quartets.
The coming of radio prompted a shift in American popular music. Songwriters turned out more sophisticated melodies for the professional singers of radio and phonograph. These songs did not adapt as well to impromptu harmonization, because they placed a greater emphasis on jazz rhythms and melodies that were better suited to dancing than to casual crooning.
Radio quartets kept close harmony singing popular with many amateur singers, though—and these singers were ready for the revival of barbershop harmony that took place in April, 1938, in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
While travelling to Kansas City on business, Tulsa tax attorney O. C. Cash happened to meet fellow Tulsan Rupert Hall in the lobby of the Muehlebach Hotel. The men fell to talking and discovered they shared a mutual love of vocal harmony. Together they bemoaned the decline of that all-American institution, the barbershop quartet, and decided to stem that decline.
Signing their names as "Rupert Hall, Royal Keeper of the Minor Keys, and O. C. Cash, Third Temporary Assistant Vice Chairman," of the "Society for the Preservation and Propagation of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in the United States" [sic], the two invited their friends to a songfest on the roof garden of the Tulsa Club, on April 11, 1938.
Twenty-six men attended that first meeting, and returned the following week with more friends. About 150 men attended the third meeting, and the grand sounds of harmony they raised on the rooftop created quite a stir. A traffic jam formed outside the hotel. While police tried to straighten out the problem, a reporter of the local newspaper heard the singing, sensed a great story, and joined the meeting.
O. C. Cash bluffed his way through the interview, saying his organization was national in scope, with branches in St. Louis, Kansas City and elsewhere. He simply neglected to mention that these "branches" were just a few scattered friends who enjoyed harmonising, but knew nothing of Cash's new club.
Cash's flair for publicity, combined with the unusual name (the ridiculous initials poked fun at the alphabet soup of New Deal programs), made an irresistible story for the news wire services, which spread it coast-to-coast. Cash's "branches" started receiving puzzling calls from men interested in joining the barbershop society. Soon, groups were meeting throughout North America to sing barbershop harmony.
SPEBSQSA was born.
Greater Montreal Chapter
In 1995, the Montreal and Pierrefonds Chapters merged forces and created a new Chapter, and this year we celebrate 51 years of barbershopping in Montreal.
Over the past five years, the quality of performance by the Island City Chorus, the Chapter's performing unit, has improved considerably. This is due in no small part to the dedication of our Directors and our Music Team.
We will be hosts of the 2003 International Barbershop Convention. If you would like to know more about that, speak to Steve Wheaton or Murray Phillips.
We welcome all our visitors to tonight's program, and we invite you to return next week.
Practice is something we do at home, every day, between rehearsals!
Rehearsal is where we reinforce what we have been practising every day!
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Alan Mackenzie, President |
Murray Phillips, Editor |