A Conversation for September Create: All God's Creatures Got a Place in the Choir

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Post 1

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

Putcher submissions here. smiley - smiley


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Post 2

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

Sixty years ago I became old enough for the Junior Choir in the church my family attended. I was eight. Trouble is, I couldn't sit still *anywhere*, let alone church. I was publicly chastised for it during the service. smiley - blush

The next year I was better behaved, but maybe that was because my mother became the Junior Choir director smiley - yikes. The years passed and my voice started going lower. I left the soprano section and became an alto. By the time I was old enough for the Senior Choir, my voice had settled into the Tenor range, but with still enough high range that I had four octaves at 16. Ultimately the really high notes disappeared, but some Bass notes sneaked their way in at the bottom.

Since I knew my way around group singing and reading musical scores by now, I kept on with it through college and numerous community choral societies in my adult years. Singing became a good excuse to travel around the world. Granted, it was necessary to learn to pronounce dozens of different languages. Thus I found myself singing Chinese music in Taiwan, Russian music in St. Petersburg, Italian music in Rome and Florence, and French, German, Estonian, etc. in the appropriate countries. Sometimes a foreign chorus came to Boston on tour, and I'd be part of the musical welcoming group. The Hokkaido Choral Society hired a musica grad student at Boston University to write a special choral piece for two choruses: one singing in Japanese, and the other in English, to be performed at Symphony Hall. Both choruses merged to sing Japanese folk songs later in the program. I have no idea what the transliterated syllables meant, but I sang along.

Choral music knows no boundaries. It embraces hundreds of different languages. It is at home in churches, concert halls, school assembly halls, nursing home function rooms, street corners, even ball parks like Fenway Park in Boston. Musical styles are all welcome. Grand opera has choral numbers. There are military choruses. People get together to sing folk songs. And who doesn't like to get the chance to sing along?


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Post 3

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

Thanks for that. smiley - ok Look for it in next week's smiley - thepost.


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Post 4

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

I'm afraid I get carried away when I get rolling on this subject. New choral pieces keep getting written, continuing a tradition that goes back thousands of years.


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Post 5

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

They do, indeed. A87783664smiley - musicalnote


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Post 6

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

I'm reading "The Twelfth Planet," which mentions songs of ancient Sumeria. The Hurrians were part of that culture, so maybe that's the song you mention.


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Post 7

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

Probably. smiley - smiley

Do you know Holst's 'Hymns from the Rig Veda'?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ct9VY4XIDDI


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Post 8

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

I have his opera "Savitri," and his songs op. 48.

Is the Rig Veda based on the ancient songs we've been discussing?


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Post 9

Dmitri Gheorgheni, Post Editor

The Rig Veda is an ancient religious text from India. It's about 5000 years old, I think. Here's a translation:

http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/rigveda/


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