ISLAND CITY CHORUS

GREATER MONTREAL CHAPTER

SPEBSQSA Inc

MINI PITCH

Date: May 7, 2001 TAKE AND SELL AT LEAST 25 SHOW TICKETS!

COMING UP - ROB'S REQUIRED EVENTS*

Saturday, June 9, 2001 Our Chapter Show with Joker's Wild at Salle Claude Champagne

Sunday, July 1, 2001 Canada Day Montreal West Celebration Details to follow ß NEW

September 10, 2001 Guest Night ß Watch for details

September 21 -23, 2001 Fall Forward Fall Retreat Details to follow SAVE THE DATE

October 26-28, 2001 District Convention & Contest Lowell, MA Details to follow SAVE THE DATE ß NEW

Saturday, November 10, 2001 50th Anniversary Cabaret Details to follow SAVE THE DATE ß NEW

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

*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

July 1 - July 8, 2001 SPEBSQSA International Convention Nashville, TN

August 9-12, 2001 Harmony Explosion Fitchburg, MA

August 10-12, 2001 Harmony College Northeast Fitchburg, MA

August 18, 2001 Vocal Majority Show in Toronto Tickets available from Roy Thompson Hall ONLY

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

June 29 - July 6, 2003 SPEBSQSA International Convention MONTREAL -ß Schedule your vacation, now!

For every action there is an equal and opposite government program.

Canada Day Singout The Chorus has a singout at the Montreal West Outdoor Celebrations on Canada Day, July 1, 2001. Please let Rob Mance know immediately if you are not available.

Have you sold your Show tickets? John Clendinneng tells me many members haven't yet taken tickets for the show. If this includes you, how much you are prepared to pay in dues to keep singing with this great chorus. The show is our largest fundraiser, by far. We need to sell ALL of the 1000 seats. Right now, we are sitting at half the seats taken. A ticket to our show is an easy sell. We have a great chorus and two great quartets headlining the show. Ask your friends to come. They will enjoy the show.

Even if you have taken tickets, you must sell them. Please do that. We ALL need to do our part.

A Song for Seniors

By John Elving (From the H@rmonet)

Sing to "These are a few of my favourite things"

Maalox and nosedrops and needles for knittin',

Walkers and handrails and new dental fittin's,

Bundles of magazines tied up with string,

These are a few of my favourite things.

Cadillacs, cataracts, hearing aids, glasses,

Polident, Fixodent, false teeth in glasses,

Pacemakers, golf carts and porches with swings,

These are a few of my favourite things.

When the pipes leak,

When the bones creak,

When the knees go bad,

Then I remember my favourite things

And then I don't feel so bad.

Hot tea and crumpets, and corn pads for bunions,

No spicy hot food nor food cook'd with onions,

Bathrobes and heat pads and hot meals they bring,

These are a few of my favourite things.

Back pains, confused brains, and no fear of sinnin',

Thin bones and fractures and hair that is thinnin'.

And we won't mention our short shrunken frames

When we remember our favourite things.

When the joints ache, when the hips break,

When the eyes grow dim,

Then I remember the great life I've had,

And then I don't feel so bad.

THEN I REMEMBER THE GREAT LIFE I'VE HAD AND THEN I DON'T FEEL SOOOO BAD!

H H H H H The Blue Champagne CD is now available. See Liz, Laura, Lindsay or Stacy and have your $20.00 ready!

Mini-Pitch Editor needed. If you think you would like to try it out, let Murray know. He will help get you started.

Gang Sing-With Quality!

By Dave Gunther, editor Whittier Choralaires, "SHOWCASE"

Every week before chapter meeting, during the break, after the meeting and at the afterglow, a wonderful thing happens. Men get together and sing just for the fun of it. They are not singing under the guidance of the director or because they are part of the program. They are just singing for the pure joy of it. This type of singing often starts with a foursome and grows to include others gathered around. It is often called "gang-singing."

For all its merits, gang-singing does have some drawbacks. The vocal quality most often used when we gang-sing is what I call our "default" vocal quality. That means the way we do it out of habit; the singing you do when you are in the shower, in the car or walking down the street, with your friends on chapter night. It is the singing you do when you are not thinking about vocal quality. Have you ever considered the vocal quality you use when you sing just for the fun of it? Try tape recording yourself sometime and listen in. You may be surprised to find that the notes are not very accurate, the vowel sounds are off, and the intervals may be slip-sliding around. But then, this is just for fun. When you get on the risers, you won't sing that way. Right?

To form a habit takes practice, but often we do not realize we are forming a habit. One day we wake up and say, "I didn't realize I've been doing that!" Whether we realize it or not, we need to take steps to practice good vocal techniques. Is this hard? No. It wasn't hard to practice bad habits, so practising good habits can't be any harder. It just requires us to think before we sing. We can practice intonation, vowel shapes and sounds, and using our faces while we sing.

Lets start with intonation. Most of us have a pitchpipe. Take yours with you in the car. When you are driving to work or around town, or, especially on a trip, pull out the pipe and blow a pitch. Sing a major scale based on the pitch you blew (the pitch is the bottom note in the scale). When you get to the top of the scale, blow the pitch again. Did you stay in the key? If not, do the exercise again. Repeat it as often as necessary until you end up on the right pitch. When you have that mastered, start from the top of the scale and come down. This is a little harder. Remember to aim for the top of the pitch as you sing each note. Soon, you will find that you are staying in key with the pitchpipe. Do this exercise often. It will help you to develop the habit of singing in tune. You may even find that sometimes you end up on the high side of the pitch. Great!

Vowel shapes and sounds require some visual assistance. A mirror is the perfect tool, and mirrors come in all shapes and sizes. Use the big mirror in the bathroom if you want privacy. Use a small hand-held mirror if you are away from home. You have seen our director demonstrate the vowel shapes he wants us to make many times. Now, just practice them in front of the mirror three times a week. You will be amazed how quickly you begin to form those shapes correctly. Watch your face. While you are working on the vowel shapes, you may find that if you raise your cheeks the vowel shapes are easier to do. It's no trick. It's just good vocal technique and it isn't hard, either.

We all know that we can't smile broadly and sing good vowel shapes at the same time. What we can do is keep the cheeks raised. Just raising your cheeks gives your face a pleasant appearance even if you are not really smiling. Again, it's not a trick, just a habit. Use that mirror to practice smiling broadly with your cheeks raised, mouth open wide in a "EH" vowel shape. Hold it for about 15 seconds, then relax. Do this exercise for about 5 minutes. Sure your cheeks are going to feel sore after the first few times. But then, they aren't used to this kind of workout yet. After a while, it will become natural and they will go to that raised position without complaining every time you sing.

Earl Moon used to say that no barbershopper ever sang a wrong note on purpose. He sang it the way he thought he was supposed to. Earl also said that practice does not make perfect: it makes permanent. If we practice the correct things, they will become permanent, , and our default vocal quality. Then, when we gang-sing, we will be doing it with quality. If we gang-sing with quality, we can't help but sing with quality when it really counts, in the show or in front of the judges.

Here is our current repertoire list:

Overture

Carol of the Bells

Harmony

Eight Candles

Didn’t We

Go Tell It On The Mountain

I Only Have Eyes For You

You'll Never Walk Alone

I’ll Walk With God

Steppin' Out With My Baby

Love Me and the World Is Mine

My Romance/It's You medley

I’m Beginning To See The Light

Orange Coloured Sky

Que reste-t-il de nos amours ?

(It's only) Words

Sixteen Tons

How Deep Is The Ocean

Scarlet Ribbons

O Canada

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