ISLAND CITY CHORUS

GREATER MONTREAL CHAPTER

SPEBSQSA Inc.

MINI PITCH

Date: December 10, 2001

COMING UP - ROB'S REQUIRED EVENTS*

Saturday, December 15, 2001 Christmas Singout Place Dollard-Newman 2-3 PM

Sunday, December 16, 2001 Christmas Singout Cote St-Luc Shopping Centre 2-4 PM

Saturday, December 22, 2001 Christmas Singout Lakeshore General Hospital 10:45-11:45 AM ß NEW

Saturday, December 22, 2001 Christmas Singout Beaconsfield Shopping Centre 2-4 PM

Sunday, December 23, 2001 Christmas Singout Galeries des Sources 1-2PM ß REVISED

Saturday, February 2, 2002 Great Northern Harmony Workshop Université de Montréal

Saturday, May 25, 2002 Annual Show Salle Claude Champagne with Nightlife

Saturday, March 29, 2003 Annual Show Salle Claude Champagne with Metropolis

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.

COMING UP - OPTIONAL, BUT FUN and EDUCATIONAL EVENTS

Monday, December 17, 2001 The 139th Street Quartet on Jay Leno 11:35 PM WPTZ-TV Channel 5 Cable 23ß NEW

Saturday, March 9, 2002 International Championship of Collegiate A cappella, McGill University ß NEW

June 30 - July 7, 2002 SPEBSQSA International Convention Portland, OR

If you're too open minded, your brains will fall out.

New Chapter Logo?

The Board hasn't officially approved it yet, but it looks good to me! If you have any comments, you can give them to a member of the board.

Barbershop on Jay Leno

THE 139th STREET QUARTET, 7-time International Medallist Quartet and only Barbershop Quartet to receive multiple Gold and Platinum Awards for their participation with NEIL DIAMOND on his two Christmas CDs will appear with NEIL DIAMOND on THE TONIGHT SHOW with JAY LENO, MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2001!

The members of "139" are:

Doug Anderson - tenor;

Dan Jordan - lead;

Pete Neushul - baritone; and

Jim Kline - bass (Jim is also bass of Gotcha!)

The 139th Street Quartet appeared several times at the Bolton Landing Barbershop Quartet Festival.

If you read this before you leave for rehearsal, set the VCR, and tape this for future viewing, or get home in time on Monday.

4 Tonight Only gets a fan letter.

One of my barbershop highlights was being part of "The Music Man" with the other members of Key of Eh?, so I can relate to the feelings that 4 Tonight Only are experiencing after their successful run in Knowlton.

Jerry Silverberg, Steve and Andrew Wheaton and Mike Harkness received a fan letter, which would make any quartet member proud. They have written evidence that touched a member of the cast in a very special and personal way with a song they sang in the dressing room.

"Dear Guys,

"A long time ago our 20 year old son died in a climbing accident. You know, as a parent, you want to die , too, but you don't. Life goes on and you only occasionally realize that some parts of you have never recovered. After that first sad year I've rarely cried, and that full-hearted soaring feeling of joy that comes when you hold your new-born, or walk in the autumn woods or hear some music, has been at most, a muted echo.

"I know you sang to me because of my sentimental at dress rehearsal, not realizing how surprised I'd been at myself. But you couldn't know that for technical reasons Glenn climbed Mount Temple at night under the full moon and when we spoke about it, I ended by saying, 'I'll be looking at the moon, and I'll be seeing you.'

"I didn't know, by the verse, what song you were singing, so at the chorus, of course I cried (hell, I should have been a puddle, or at least a fountain!) But your four loveable faces, my feeling so specially singled out and your gift of those glorious chords, touched a sleeping part of my heart and instead of tears all the way home, I felt, after all this time, a heart full of joy that made me smile.

"How can I ever thank you?

" J"

"I'll Be Seeing You," is a great song and the arrangement that 4 Tonight Only sang in competition is the same one that the Alexandria Harmonizers sang in their Gold Medal performance of the song. It has a lovely verse written by Rob Hopkins.

Thanks to Jerry Silverberg for sharing this wonderful thank you letter the quartet received.

Let’s talk craft - vowel matching

Tom Raburn Big D Bulletin, September 1998

Question: When does 2 + 2 = 5? Answer: When barbershop harmony is sung correctly, creating harmonic overtones and "expanded sound."

One of the most important factors in the achievement of choral blend and expanded sound is unity of vowel sounds. Vowels are what we sing and sustain, separated by consonants to make words. When we match vowel sounds, we create like harmonics and the sound expands in intensity through reinforcement. In singing, vowels are created through the natural resonance of the human vocal tract. The tongue, lips and jaw are used to fashion the resonators into their vowel shapes. Some basic rules to follow when forming vowel sounds are:

  1. When producing all vowel sounds, the tip of the tongue should be placed gently on the lower gum ridge, with the tip barely touching the base of the lower teeth. This helps keep the throat open so the vocal chords can vibrate naturally through the resonators (mouth, throat, and sinus cavities).
  2. The jaw should be allowed to relax naturally with a swinging down and back motion.
  3. The lips should leave the teeth uncovered.
  4. Although the mouth must be open wide, it is not how wide it is open but the shape that is most important.

Every vowel can be sung with one of three mouth shapes: round (example—"oh"), square (example— "ih" as in sit) and oblong (example—"ah"as in pop). Refinements to form each specific vowel sound are made by the degree to which the tongue is arched in the mouth, and the degree to which the jaw is dropped. For instance, both the "oh" sound and the "oo" (as in moon) sound are made with the round mouth shape, but the "oh" sound is made with the mouth as open as possible while the "oo" sound is made with the smallest, most rounded shape.

As we sing the songs in our repertoire, keep in mind the basic mechanics of producing vowel sounds and think about the target vowel sound for each word in the song. Properly matched vowels can enable our chorus of 20-something men to "fill the hall" and create the expanded sound that makes barbershop harmony so much fun to sing and hear.

If you haven't started to look for a quartet, why not? It is fun, it helps you to learn how to tune to others, and its fun. You can sing songs that you really like and its fun. Oh, by the way, did I mention? It's fun!

Practice is something we do at home, every day, between rehearsals!

Rehearsal is where we reinforce what we have been practising every day!

Steven Wheaton, President

Murray Phillips, Editor of the Mini Pitch