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   <title>Pacific Mozart Ensemble</title>
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   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1</id>
   <updated>2008-08-25T14:12:03Z</updated>
   <subtitle>News, Projects, Commentary from the Pacific Mozart Ensemble</subtitle>
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<entry>
   <title>Welcome to the 2008-09 Season</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/08/welcome_to_the_200809_season.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.58</id>
   
   <published>2008-08-24T21:29:43Z</published>
   <updated>2008-08-25T14:12:03Z</updated>
   
   <summary> Welcome to the 2008-09 season. And a special welcome to our newest members! I am excited to get started on the music for this coming season.We have: OctoberPerformances with Meredith Monk and her ensemble. The piece is Songs of...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
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<p>Welcome to the 2008-09 season. And a special welcome to our newest members! I am excited to get started on the music for this coming season.<br/>We have:</p>
<p><strong>October<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2761191116_6108e4b936_b.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2761191116_6108e4b936_b_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="2761191116_6108e4b936_b.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="2761191116_6108e4b936_b.jpg" border="0" id="2761191116_6108e4b936_b.jpg"/></a></strong><br/>Performances with Meredith Monk and her ensemble. The piece is <em>Songs of Ascension</em>. The stairs on a pyramid, the vaulted ceilings of a cathedral, the pilgrimage up a mountainside are all inspirations for this compelling new piece.</p>
<p>One performance will be at Stanford and the other set of benefit performances will be site-specific, at Ann Hamilton's Tower on the beautiful Oliver Ranch in Geyserville! One of the rehearsals will be recorded for a commercial film!</p>
<p>For more photos of the tower, follow this link: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/10413429@N08/sets/72157606709734262/show/">Tower at Oliver Ranch</a></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/121960960386_Just_Dave.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/121960960386_Just_Dave_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 75px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="Just_Dave.jpg" height="200" width="75" alt="Just_Dave.jpg" border="0" id="121960960386_Just_Dave.jpg"/></a>December</strong><br/>We will be collaborating again with the Grammy-nominated Quartet San Francisco on works of Dave Brubeck. We will sing the entire triptych, <em>Canticles</em>, along with several other Brubeck choral works including 2 with texts by Harlem Renaissance poet, Langston Hughes.</p>
<p><strong>January<br/></strong>We will record a CD of the Brubeck works.</p>
<p><strong>March<br/></strong>We will produce our annual fundraiser in a new venue, with a new format. This is your opportunity to present a solo based on a theme (to be announced).</p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Shining_Star.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Shining_Star_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 132px" title="Shining Star.jpg" height="132" width="200" alt="Shining Star.jpg" border="0" id="Shining_Star.jpg"/></a>June</strong><br/>Our brilliant Annual Jazz and Pop concert set, 3 performances of the best singing anywhere! Intriguing arrangements, amazing voices.</p>
<p>These are the events on our calendar. As you know, recently we've had some great opportunities that pop up during the season. Perhaps something life-changing will appear!</p>
<p>In any case, we have a fulfilling season ahead of us.</p>
<p>I look forward to seeing you soon!<br/>Lynne</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Dave%20Brubeck" class="ztag" rel="tag">Dave Brubeck</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Langston%20Hughes" class="ztag" rel="tag">Langston Hughes</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Meredith%20Monk" class="ztag" rel="tag">Meredith Monk</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Oliver%20Ranch" class="ztag" rel="tag">Oliver Ranch</a></span> 
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<entry>
   <title>Jeff Watts Sings Britten with SFCS</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/08/jeff_watts_sings_britten_with.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.57</id>
   
   <published>2008-08-05T18:01:43Z</published>
   <updated>2008-08-08T21:57:29Z</updated>
   
   <summary> One Sunday morning when I was seven, I told my mother I wanted to sing with the church choir, which was made up of men and boys in the English choral tradition. I&apos;ve been singing ever since, although not...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Summer Vacation" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
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<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/jeffwatts_gc.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/jeffwatts_gc_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 60px; HEIGHT: 84px" title="jeffwatts gc.jpg" height="84" width="60" alt="jeffwatts gc.jpg" border="0" id="jeffwatts_gc.jpg"/></a>One Sunday morning when I was seven, I told my mother I wanted to sing with the church choir, which was made up of men and boys in the English choral tradition. I've been singing ever since, although not in a ruffed collar. I wore green tights once, and an elaborate kimono for one production…</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/merwatts_gc.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/merwatts_gc_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 75px; HEIGHT: 75px" title="merwatts gc.jpg" height="75" width="75" alt="merwatts gc.jpg" border="0" id="merwatts_gc.jpg"/></a>I've met many wonderful people and wonderful musicians. I met my wife Meredith in the Pomona College Glee Clubs. We sang together in several groups including the S.F. Symphony Chorus. Unfortunately there simply isn't enough time to do everything you want to do; Meredith eventually dropped out of choral singing.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/gc-red.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/gc-red_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 450px; HEIGHT: 231px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" title="gc-red.jpg" height="231" width="450" alt="gc-red.jpg" border="0" id="gc-red.jpg"/></a>Friends in various choruses encouraged her to start singing again but that didn't get anywhere until this summer, when the tipping point was Benjamin Britten's "War Requiem", the summer concert of the <a href="http://www.sfchoral.org/">San Francisco Choral Society</a>.</p>
<p>We love this piece! The first year we moved to San Francisco, we performed it with the Winifred Baker Chorale. We were blown away - the piece is incredible. Meredith couldn't resist the opportunity to sing it again.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/davies_2005.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/davies_2005_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 109px" title="davies_2005.jpg" height="109" width="200" alt="davies_2005.jpg" border="0" id="davies_2005.jpg"/></a>Last month I learned Janet Corah sang in that performance too. It isn't surprising I hadn't realized that, because the Winifred Baker Chorale was somewhat schizophrenic. Half the chorus rehearsed in San Francisco and half rehearsed in Marin, coming together for performance week. Janet was in the Marin cohort.</p>
<p>Mer was anxious about the audition because she felt pretty rusty, so she worked with Kristin Womack to help knock the rust off the pipes. It worked - she passed the audition and we started rehearsing.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Wilfred_Owen-hires.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Wilfred_Owen-hires_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 129px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="Wilfred_Owen-hires.jpg" height="200" width="129" alt="Wilfred_Owen-hires.jpg" border="0" id="Wilfred_Owen-hires.jpg"/></a>Benjamin Britten composed the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Requiem">War Requiem</a> in 1962 for the re-consecration of Coventry Cathedral, which was bombed and destroyed during WWII. The text is a mash-up of the Latin mass for the dead, and poems of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilfred_Owen">Wilfred Owen</a>, the leading poet of WWI. Owen wrote poems about trench warfare and the slaughter of his generation. After treatment for shell shock, Owen chose to return to the front, where he died a week before the war ended.</p>
<p>Britten divides his forces in three.</p>
<ul>
<li>The Latin mass is set for orchestra, chorus, and soprano soloist.</li>
<li>A children's chorus innocently sings some of the prayers.</li>
<li>Owen's poetry is set for chamber orchestra with tenor and baritone soloists.</li>
</ul>
<p>The juxtapositions are heart wrenching. One example is in the offertory (the point in the service when the congregation offers gifts to the church). The children pray that the dead will be delivered from the inferno and the lion's mouth. The chorus prays that the dead will be brought into the light, as was promised to Abraham and his seed. Here is interpolated a poem that tells the story of Abraham and Isaac, the ultimate offering, but this version goes terribly wrong.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/britten.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/britten_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 186px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="britten.jpg" height="200" width="186" alt="britten.jpg" border="0" id="britten.jpg"/></a>Britten rarely lets us sit back and listen to the pretty music (with the exception of the Recordare). His music does not sound especially dissonant, but he uses the harmonic ambiguity of whole tone scales, and a C-F# tritone that resolves in different ways, to keep us on edge.</p>
<p>The piece was first performed in 1962 with Britten as one of the conductors. He chose soloists from three countries ravaged by the war - Peter Pears (England), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Germany) and Galina Vishnevskaya (Russia). (The USSR prevented Vishnevskaya from traveling to the first performance but she sang on the first recording the next year.)</p>
<p>Andy Stewart notes "I heard the first performance of this, broadcast on BBC radio from the ruins of Coventry Cathedral in May, 1962. It is an absolutely stunning work, if anything more relevant to the present-day US than it was to early 1960s Britain."</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/geary.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/geary_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 118px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="geary.jpg" height="150" width="118" alt="geary.jpg" border="0" id="geary.jpg"/></a>You need serious conducting chops to bring this off successfully and Bob Geary was up to the job. It helped that he did this piece before, with the SFCS in 1999. There was no anxiety about balancing with the orchestra - the chorus had more than 170 singers on stage. I take my hat off to SFCS - I really enjoyed singing with SFCS and working with Bob. You can read the review in SF Classical Voice here: <a href="http://www.sfcv.org/2008/08/05/silencing-the-guns-of-war/">Silencing the Guns of War</a>. I talked up PME and maybe that will bear fruit. (The last time I sang with SFCS, Paul Keaton joined PME.)</p>
<p>Sometimes we don't get respect from those who know us best. Bob told us about the notes his wife gave him after the last dress rehearsal. He had become more and more animated in conducting the sections where the intensity peaks. His wife told him he was starting to resemble Cro-Magnon man and, although a great conductor might get away with it, he was a good conductor and it wouldn't work.</p>
<p>Bob was put to the test near the start of the first movement in the Friday performance. That all-important C-F# tritone is played on the tubular bells at several key moments and the chorus depends on it to get the pitch. The percussionist seemed to be having a little trouble counting to 4. One time Bob gave a big cue on the 4th beat of the measure and nothing happened. No problem - Bob smoothly added a 5th beat to the measure and gave the cue again!</p>
<p>One thing I particularly love about singing with PME is the wide variety of music we perform. As Jim Hale observed, if you aren't in PME you don't understand how many different things we do. That said, there is a special thrill in performing a big symphonic work. We experienced some of that this year when we did Beethoven's 9th with NVS; I was delighted to get another fix this summer. It was wonderful to perform with Meredith again, and it was wonderful to sing the Britten again.</p>
<p>-Jeff Watts</p>
<br/><p>Update Aug 8th 2PM:<br/>We are having trouble with the comment section on the blog. If you would like to comment send me (eric) and email and I'll post it like so:</p>
<p><strong>Comment from Nette:</strong></p>
Thanks for this Jeff. The one time I've done the War Requiem was with the SF Symphony, <span style="CURSOR: pointer; BORDER-BOTTOM: rgb(0,102,204) 1px dashed" class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1218228195_3">Kurt Masur</span> conducting. The most incredible moment came in the first rehearsal with chorus and orchestra. We weren't bringing the intensity of emotion that Maestro Masur wanted for the piece, so after several pointed remarks, he put his baton down and spoke quietly of war. He was drafted into the <span style="BACKGROUND: none transparent scroll repeat 0% 0%; CURSOR: pointer; BORDER-BOTTOM: rgb(0,102,204) 1px dashed; moz-background-clip: -moz-initial; moz-background-origin: -moz-initial; moz-background-inline-policy: -moz-initial" class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1218228195_4">German army</span> as a young teen (I seem to recall he was only 15), toward the very end of <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1218228195_5">WWII</span>. Only 24 members of his company, all of whom were under 20, lived through the <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1218228195_6">end of the war</span>. THAT is what war meant to him, that is what the War Requiem should portray, and <span class="yshortcuts" id="lw_1218228195_7">Davies Symphony Hall</span> was utterly silent as he finished. He picked his baton up, gave the downbeat, and we made real music. What a humbling experience...<br/><p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Benjamin%20Britten" class="ztag" rel="tag">Benjamin Britten</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Bob%20Geary" class="ztag" rel="tag">Bob Geary</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Pomona%20College%20Glee%20Club" class="ztag" rel="tag">Pomona College Glee Club</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/San%20Francisco%20Choral%20Society" class="ztag" rel="tag">San Francisco Choral Society</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/War%20Requiem" class="ztag" rel="tag">War Requiem</a></span> 
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<entry>
   <title>Elisabeth Eliassen Writes in from Summer Camp</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/07/elisabeth_eliassen_writes_in_f.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.56</id>
   
   <published>2008-07-28T02:59:27Z</published>
   <updated>2008-07-28T05:55:36Z</updated>
   
   <summary> Well, I am singing a bit of Hildegard-- involved in a production of &quot;Ordo Virtutum&quot; with S.F. Renaissance Voices that goes up the first three weekends of August, at venues around the Bay Area. What I can say right...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
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<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/HildyPic.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/HildyPic_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 138px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="HildyPic.jpg" height="200" width="138" alt="HildyPic.jpg" border="0" id="HildyPic.jpg"/></a>Well, I am singing a bit of Hildegard-- involved in a production of "Ordo Virtutum" with <a href="http://www.sfrv.org/page5.html">S.F. Renaissance Voices</a> that goes up the first three weekends of August, at venues around the Bay Area. What I can say right now is this: for being an Abbess, and therefore, a righteous sister, Hildegard was a mother of a composer! Memorization is really difficult because, unlike the "Play of Daniel", where there was thematically different music for each set of characters, rhyming text and enough movement through a vaguely familiar story line to get cues, "Ordo Virtutum" is a unique work based on visions of Hildegard. These visions were first sketched in her monumental work "Scivias", then developed into an "opera-like" piece, which, if it was ever performed, would have been heard at the dedication of the convent she founded at Rupertsburg.</p>
<p>The piece is textually highly rhetorical, musically quite modal, and very little physical movement is called for (although we are trying to create some for this presentation). Each of the virtues explains, to a soul about to be tempted, who and what they are and how they can help the soul remain free within sanctity. The Devil tempts and the Soul succumbs to the Devil's temptations, but turns back with repentance and allows the virtues to help her. The Virtues bind the Devil, to break his hold on the Soul, then guide the Soul back to the light.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/HildyManu.gif"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/HildyManu_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 137px" title="HildyManu.gif" height="137" width="200" alt="HildyManu.gif" border="0" id="HildyManu.gif"/></a>The music is replete with little motives (some of these are described in the literature about Hildegard's music as being "typically Hildegardian motives". There is one motive in particular that is "Hildegard's signature": a four note motive of tonic rising to the perfect fifth, rising to the octave, declining to the minor seventh). These motives, either helpfully or unhelpfully, recur all over the place and I have painstakingly marked them all in my score, whenever I run across them, with a red pencil. (Someone should do a study on all the motives alone, to see if there is some sort of system there. A diverting search on the net revealed no such study...) Where these motives are applied, they are embellished and altered frequently. That is to say, there are no sequences to be seen in the tropes. It is almost like doing an hour-or-so-long song that resembles through-composed recitative, but without any helpfully jangling harpsichord cues!</p>
<p>Okay, all that having been said, I am confessing that it is quite a difficult task to memorize the parts of this music that need to be memorized [as some other PME women can attest to, as we sang a few Hildegard chants back in '94 and '95 (if I am recalling correctly)]. But, ladies, that was only 4 to 5 minutes of chanting at most, maybe less… "Ordo Virtutum" is just shy of an hour and a half in length, and though we don't need to have the entire piece memorized, each of the ten ladies involved needs to have a chunk memorized.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/QOEmusic.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/QOEmusic_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="QOEmusic.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="QOEmusic.jpg" border="0" id="QOEmusic.jpg"/></a>As you might be able to see in the adjacent photo, my score is scribbled over with English text, yellow highlights, red pencil markings over the recurring motivic bits, and other markings that show the necessary specifics of German Latin pronunciation. Voted "most likely to succeed with office products" in high school, I have been as inventive as possible, creating a card deck with the text of each number, marked with the pauses and signifiers over each word where there is a melisma. Wherever Hildegard's signature motive occurs in my portions of the music, I have marked a tilde (for Hilde…) over the portion of the text where it occurs. I have my tuning fork by my side, and am employing some 21st century technology in the form of an iPod Nano with a voice memo recorder attached.</p>
<p>I wake up in the middle of the night with random bits and pieces running through my head, but not full chants and not in any kind of recognizable order, from one to the next.</p>
<p>Add to my dilemma that this is summer, the twins need diversions (or, at least, to be taxied to and from their diversions…), my part-time job is still in full-swing, the husband is in and out of town, I have other projects, not to mention social obligations, pulling at me, and, whew (!), I have a lot weighing on my mind.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I am having fun! It is a wonderful challenge to work on a piece like this, which is so seldom performed. It is great to be working with a new set of singers. The rehearsal process has been oddly soothing and low-key (perhaps a bit too low-key…). The amazing thing is that, in the church where we have been practicing, we have been able to keep the pitch center fairly constant as we move through the sung passages. Slaving over a hot score in the good ole summertime is, perhaps, not so much fun... But, I have been enjoying the challenge.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/CostumeCrawl.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/CostumeCrawl_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="CostumeCrawl.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="CostumeCrawl.jpg" border="0" id="CostumeCrawl.jpg"/></a>And this group speaks "singer-eater"! The Hildegyrlz, as we have been dubbed, went on an expedition together last weekend, first for lunch at Udupi Palace on University, then down the street to procure costumes, with the help of our choreographer (yes, there are some dance numbers, but this ain't Ziegfelds' Folly!), culminating in a casual rehearsal, fueled by glasses of fine wine. To the right of yours truly (in brilliant blue) you see Purnima Jha, our choreographer; she is known internationally for Jaipur style Kathak dancing.</p>
<p>If you are around in August, I hope you'll check out our show!<br/>-Elisabeth Eliassen<br/>July 2008</p>
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<entry>
   <title>Another Year in the Books</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/06/another_year_in_the_books.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.55</id>
   
   <published>2008-06-17T07:35:27Z</published>
   <updated>2008-06-17T07:44:25Z</updated>
   
   <summary> We had our final concert of the season last night, and it was one for the ages. Amazing considering the time crunch we had putting together. Seems like time gets tighter every year, but we somehow get it together...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Jazz &amp; Pop" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
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<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/This_Little_Show_We_Do.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/This_Little_Show_We_Do_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="This Little Show We Do.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="This Little Show We Do.jpg" border="0" id="This_Little_Show_We_Do.jpg"/></a>We had our final concert of the season last night, and it was one for the ages. Amazing considering the time crunch we had putting together. Seems like time gets tighter every year, but we somehow get it together and, if I do say so myself, <em>nailed it</em>. It was one of the most enjoyable shows in recent memory. Each night as we came up to sing the final number, I found myself wishing the show could just keep going. That's a nice feeling to have.</p>
<p>Here's a smattering of scenes from the last 2 weeks.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Summers_Bounty_2.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Summers_Bounty_2_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 149px" title="Summers Bounty 2.jpg" height="149" width="200" alt="Summers Bounty 2.jpg" border="0" id="Summers_Bounty_2.jpg"/></a>Here we see the women of <em>Summer Bounty</em> engaging in the time honored tradition of squeezing in <em>just one more</em> run-through before the show. Each hall is different, so there's always a mad scramble to sing in the space during that precious time before the doors open. If you've ever been stuck out side waiting for us to get the show on the road, well now you know what we are up to!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Old_Mac_Getting_Us_Started.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Old_Mac_Getting_Us_Started_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 149px" title="Old Mac Getting Us Started.jpg" height="149" width="200" alt="Old Mac Getting Us Started.jpg" border="0" id="Old_Mac_Getting_Us_Started.jpg"/></a>The Green Room is a great place to do this show. The acoustics are fabulous. There were a number of tunes that sounded there best here on Sat. And as if that wasn't enough, it's beautiful! Here's a shot of Old MacDonald revving up the audience for the show.</p>
<br/><p><br/></p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Coalmine.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Coalmine_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Coalmine.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Coalmine.jpg" border="0" id="Coalmine.jpg"/></a>Somehow we ended up with a lot of props this year; Armageddon cloaks, wigs, bling, feather boas, and a pick-axe! You know, I'm not so sure the foreman is gonna let those ladies go down in the mine dressed like that...</p>
<p><br/></p>
<br/><br/><p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Bryan_Gets_A_Genius_Idea.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Bryan_Gets_A_Genius_Idea_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 100px; HEIGHT: 75px" title="Bryan Gets A Genius Idea.jpg" height="75" width="100" alt="Bryan Gets A Genius Idea.jpg" border="0" id="Bryan_Gets_A_Genius_Idea.jpg"/></a>This year there were a lot of languages. One of the hardest to memorize was <em>Tour de France</em>. There were German <em>and</em> French lines to memorize over a very repetitive melody. Someone had the bright idea that the Tenors should be lucky enough to get that assignment. W<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lynne_is_Displeased.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lynne_is_Displeased_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 100px; HEIGHT: 75px" title="Lynne is Displeased.jpg" height="75" width="100" alt="Lynne is Displeased.jpg" border="0" id="Lynne_is_Displeased.jpg"/></a>e were cramming right up to the last (and maybe could have crammed harder, if you know what I mean...) At the City Club, Bryan came up with a solution that amused some, but was met with stern disapproval from others...:</p>
<p>After the last show everyone congregates to unwind and relive the highlights of the show. This year we found ourselves once again at TCs house (Thanks TC!). The party was a blast and we sang through a couple tunes from the show. The high point of the night was a rather robust rendition of <em>With a Little Help From My Friends</em>, complete with revival clappin' 'n' stompin'. In TCs house the thing sounded amazing... and loud! I don't think Gretchen's relatives from NY knew what hit them!</p>
<p>As usual, the singers were ravenous after the show, so when some smart guy brought a Zach's pizza, the feeding frenzy began. Gone in 30s!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Feeding_Frenzy.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Feeding_Frenzy_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 450px; HEIGHT: 337px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" title="Feeding Frenzy.jpg" height="337" width="450" alt="Feeding Frenzy.jpg" border="0" id="Feeding_Frenzy.jpg"/></a></p>
<p>It was a great show and a great time. Thanks everyone who helped make it happen and thanks to those of you that came to watch the show.</p>
<p>You can view the entire slide show here:<br/><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/10413429@N08/sets/72157605660609873/">PME Jazz &amp; Pops 2008 Pictures</a></p>
<p>See you next year!<br/>-Eric<br/><br/></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/A%20Cappella" class="ztag" rel="tag">A Cappella</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Beatles" class="ztag" rel="tag">Beatles</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Berkeley%20City%20Club" class="ztag" rel="tag">Berkeley City Club</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Green%20Room" class="ztag" rel="tag">Green Room</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Old%20MacDonald" class="ztag" rel="tag">Old MacDonald</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Workin%20in%20a%20Coal%20Mine" class="ztag" rel="tag">Workin in a Coal Mine</a></span> 
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   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>PME: Jazz &amp; Pop Time!</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/06/2008_jp_blog.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.54</id>
   
   <published>2008-06-03T19:47:33Z</published>
   <updated>2008-06-03T21:38:15Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ One of the most unique things about The Pacific Mozart Ensemble is the annual A Cappella Jazz &amp; Pop concerts we produce every year. Unusual for a number of reasons: Here's a choral group that actually performs classical, modern...]]></summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Jazz &amp; Pop" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Wanna_Baraka.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Wanna_Baraka_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 149px" title="Wanna Baraka.jpg" height="149" width="200" alt="Wanna Baraka.jpg" border="0" id="Wanna_Baraka.jpg"/></a>One of the most unique things about <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">The Pacific Mozart Ensemble</a> is the annual A Cappella Jazz &amp; Pop concerts we produce every year. Unusual for a number of reasons:</p>
<ul>
<li>Here's a choral group that actually performs classical, modern and popular music, and pretty darn well at that.</li>
<li>For the past 20-something years, each Jazz &amp; Pop show has almost completely new repertoire. We're talking 25 to 30 new arrangements every year.</li>
<li>No other group, to my knowledge, does what PME does.</li>
</ul>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lovely_Ladies.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lovely_Ladies_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 112px" title="Lovely Ladies.jpg" height="112" width="150" alt="Lovely Ladies.jpg" border="0" id="Lovely_Ladies.jpg"/></a>I think that this show in particular attracts singers, not unlike myself, to PME who love to sing in the pop and jazz style but then get the opportunity to sing and perform classical, traditional choral, innovative and unusual material the rest of the year. It's a challenge, and switching gears for the various styles can be tricky. BUT ... this group can do it.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/The_Beach_House.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/The_Beach_House_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="The Beach House.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="The Beach House.jpg" border="0" id="The_Beach_House.jpg"/></a>The process for putting this show together is pretty amazing, and not for the light-hearted. Individuals get their own song ideas and charts together, form up small/medium sized groups and rehearse outside our regular Monday night rehearsals in order to audition for the program. A committee is selected and on one Monday night, early in May, all those rehearsed small groups audition and the final program is chosen that night. Whew. It seems that even the busiest of our singers find time to put songs together and rehearse. It's fun to hear what unfolds in the auditions, although selecting the final list is not always the easiest process since there is an abundance of great stuff. The end product is an a cappella show like you've probably never heard. Humor, beauty, rock 'n roll, a few farm animal noises ...</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Do_Not_Mess_with_Gretch.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Do_Not_Mess_with_Gretch_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 112px" title="Do Not Mess with Gretch.jpg" height="112" width="150" alt="Do Not Mess with Gretch.jpg" border="0" id="Do_Not_Mess_with_Gretch.jpg"/></a>The performances are always fun for the audience and (usually) for the performers, but between the audition night and the concert dates, we all pack up and head down to Pajaro Dunes in Watsonville (although we have had retreats in other places at times) for a weekend retreat<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Dinner.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Dinner_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 112px" title="Dinner.jpg" height="112" width="150" alt="Dinner.jpg" border="0" id="Dinner.jpg"/></a> to workshop the show. Now, we're not dubbed the Singer-Eaters for nothin'. We do work hard all day that Saturday, singing our songs for the coaches and all, but we have lots of food and drink ... and it's one of those rare times when we're together and can just hang out with each other. More singing ensues after the long day of workshops, believe it or not.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kerry_Marsh_Directs.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kerry_Marsh_Directs_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Kerry Marsh Directs.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Kerry Marsh Directs.jpg" border="0" id="Kerry_Marsh_Directs.jpg"/></a>This year, our long-time friend and coach Nile Norton was not able to come to the retreat but we had the opportunity to bring in another fabulous educator, Kerry Marsh. Kerry directs the vocal jazz program at <a href="http://www.csus.edu/music/">Sacramento State University</a> and <a href="http://www.deltacollege.edu/dept/music/index.html">San Joaquin Delta College</a>, and is a prolific and wonderful arranger and composer. Check out his stuff when you have a chance: <a href="http://www.kerrymarsh.com/">www.kerrymarsh.net</a> One of his beautiful arrangements will be in this years' show, in fact; a completely new take on "Scarborough Fair".</p>
<p>Jazz &amp; Pop closes our concert season with a bang, and although we're exhausted and ready for a break by mid-June, we keep coming back every year with renewed energy and lot of creative ideas.</p>
<p>-Angie Doctor</p>
<p>(All the pics from our J&amp;P 2008 Retreat at the <a href="http://www.flickr.com/groups/409810@N24/pool/">PME Group Pool</a>)<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Evening_Entertainment.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Evening_Entertainment_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 450px; HEIGHT: 337px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" title="Evening Entertainment.jpg" height="337" width="450" alt="Evening Entertainment.jpg" border="0" id="Evening_Entertainment.jpg"/></a></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/A%20Cappella" class="ztag" rel="tag">A Cappella</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Kerry%20Marsh" class="ztag" rel="tag">Kerry Marsh</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Sacramento%20State%20University" class="ztag" rel="tag">Sacramento State University</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/San%20Joaquin%20Delta%20College" class="ztag" rel="tag">San Joaquin Delta College</a></span> 
</p>]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>From &quot;Joy to the Lord&quot; to &quot;Freude, schöner Götterfunken&quot;--a week in PME</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/04/from_joy_to_the_lord_to_freude.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.53</id>
   
   <published>2008-04-24T04:56:17Z</published>
   <updated>2008-04-24T06:56:16Z</updated>
   
   <summary> Last weekend on the cavernous Zellerbach Hall stage we closed our Sweet Honey in the Rock collaboration singing &quot;Joy in the Morning,&quot; repeating &quot;Joy to the Lord&quot; dozens of times as the wonderful women of Sweet Honey moved to...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Collaborations" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
         <category term="Performance" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
         <category term="Thoughts and Musings" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Downtime.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Downtime_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Downtime.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Downtime.jpg" border="0" id="Downtime.jpg"/></a>Last weekend on the cavernous Zellerbach Hall stage we closed our <a href="http://www.sweethoney.com/">Sweet Honey in the Rock</a> collaboration singing "Joy in the Morning," repeating "Joy to the Lord" dozens of times as the wonderful women of Sweet Honey moved to the music in front of us, urging on and urged on by the enthusiastic crowd. This weekend we will invoke the same word--<em>Freude</em> this time, again and again--as we join the <a href="http://www.napavalleysymphony.org/homepage/index.html">Napa Valley Symphony</a> to sing Beethoven's <em>Ninth</em> up in Yountville. The last week has catalyzed many reflections about the piece, its political baggage, and my uneasy relationship to it. This process is especially poignant to me as I contemplate that the day I began writing this, April 8th, would have been my father's 93rd birthday, and it is his experience that so strongly affected my own.</p>
<p>This will be my third opportunity to sing the 9th Symphony, and the second time I've actually sung it. The first chance was at Pomona College back in 1978, when the great Robert Shaw came and conducted with the Atlanta Symphony, and all the local college choirs joined to provide the chorus; I would miss that one when I was accepted to do a Study Abroad that semester. My old roommate summed up the experience--"Shaw heard us struggling with these lines and said, 'Beethoven didn't write this for mortals, he wrote it for gods! You must become gods!'"--at least that's what I recall from an aerogram he scribbled to me at Oxford. The next opportunity was in 1994, the first year I sang with PME, a true baptism of fire: Jeffrey Thomas asked for people to beef up his American Bach Soloists chorus, having put together an authentic-instruments band for the Ninth as a capper to the Berkeley Early Music Festival [<a href="http://www.americanbach.org/recordings/BeethovenNotes.htm">Recently released on CD</a>]. Everyone else had sung the Ninth multiple times before, and though I enjoyed the steep learning curve with no note-bashing, I don't remember having much time to ponder subtleties before we were recording and performing at First Congregational Church with a world-class group and the World's Loudest Timpanist.</p>
<p>The Ninth has always occupied an odd, even disturbing place in my musical world: my father was born in Breslau (then part of Germany) during the first World War, part of a very musical academic family that played string quartets, with impromptu musical soirees a focus of the their social life. My grandfather and my father played violin and viola, his older brother Otto, a fine cellist, studied composition with Hindemith among others, and my grandmother was a talented pianist. But she was technically Jewish: thus, as the Nazis consolidated their power, everyone would either die or emigrate. My grandfather succumbed to an aneurysm in 1935, at about the age I am now, having lost his academic post to a Party functionary, already clearly seeing the inevitable destruction of German culture and the co-opting of the remaining artists and musicians. Because my grandfather had served with distinction in the first war, Otto was still allowed to join the German Army, under a special rule: as my father bitterly put it, "he could become cannon fodder" and be killed in the Ukraine in 1942. The three remaining siblings and my Grossmutter all ended up in California--a scholar, a professor, a social worker and an artist--and I still have a huge stash of musty piano scores and sheet music waiting to be sorted and given away. Even from my mother's side I got a negative attitude about the Ninth--I think from her small-town Indiana perspective it evoked too many newsreels of goose-stepping troops and waving flags, as well as an undefined resentment of how a supposedly civilized culture could fall so far so fast.</p>
<p>Thus my earliest memories of hearing the Ninth are tainted by a strange sense of shame and ambivalence, by the knowledge that this sublime music had been co-opted to set the mood for gigantic and bombastic Nazi party functions. More broadly and tragically, every quality that my father saw as German--diligence, respect for hard work, creativity, discipline, intellect--was turned to serve evil rather than good. He did not just blame the Party, he blamed his old country as well, for becoming what one scholar has termed "Hitler's willing executioners," though after joining the American Army he helped bring some of those leaders to a form of justice as a translator before the Nuremberg tribunals.</p>
<p>Even as the soaring lines and poetry moved some deep part of me, I felt the shadow of this history, and recently I have been researching the specific ways in which the SS and the SA bent the Ode to Joy to their purposes despite Beethoven's distinctly non-Aryan physiognomy and heritage. Of course, the Nazis' perversion of music mirrored their cynical manipulation of language, from KdF, "<em>Kraft durch Freude</em>" (Strength through Joy, the name of the Nazi recreational-cultural movement), through the bitterly ironic "<em>Arbeit macht frei</em>" (work makes you free) that adorned the entrances to the camps of no return, where many relatives died for their Jewishness, or killed themselves to avoid being killed. Anyone who has seen Leni Riefenstahl's films like "Triumph of the Will" or "Olympiade" knows how frighteningly beautiful the Nazis' choreographed multimedia spectacles truly were--and how seductive their combination of music, movement, and message must have been to susceptible participants.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/SHIR0129_edit-1.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/SHIR0129_edit-1_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="SHIR0129 edit-1.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="SHIR0129 edit-1.jpg" border="0" id="SHIR0129_edit-1.jpg"/></a>Last Saturday as I watched Sweet Honey moving in front of me I could not help thinking that their dancing was "ecstatic" in the etymological sense of the word (from the Greek "<em>extasis</em>," meaning taken outside of themselves by this music). As I write this I realize that during the very semester I wasn't singing Beethoven with Shaw I was studying Renaissance Neoplatonism, and learning that this "ecstatic" potential was the very reason why Puritan religious leaders frowned on music: it opened a line to the soul that was beyond reason, too direct and therefore too dangerous to be deployed without careful constraints. With the suspension of reason, participants and listeners were susceptible to the infusion of ideas without conscious control--something we find laughable in the context of "Dirty Dancing" but menacing in the context of Nuremberg or Berlin.</p>
<p>Athletes sometimes know this feeling of "extasis" too, the "runner's high," the suffusion of feel-good chemicals produced by the body as it exercises at a sufficiently intense level: you are lifted up, you feel supernaturally strong, you sometimes get the sense that you are simultaneously outside of yourself looking in, and inhabiting your body in a way that doesn't happen in your everyday existence.</p>
<p>Rehearsing the Ninth this spring with Lynne has been an intensely athletic experience: more so than other choruses, we are trying to put across the words and the notes with greater clarity than audiences are used to getting in the customary wall-of-sound presentations. For the first time many of us are actually hearing some of the lines and words that otherwise get lost to poor diction. Even this aspect has brought its odd connections, as being "the German pronunciation guy" makes me self-conscious about my limits: thanks to a year in Germany when I was nine years old, and years of listening to my Dad and his relatives, my German is more by ear than by rule.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Practice_with_the_Choir.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Practice_with_the_Choir_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Practice with the Choir.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Practice with the Choir.jpg" border="0" id="Practice_with_the_Choir.jpg"/></a>The rehearsals are a great workout for both the vocal apparatus and the mind: Start with the difficulty of spitting out lines like "<em>Ihr / stürzt-nie / der-Mil / li-onen</em>" (do you bow down, you millions?) without letting Germanic consonant-clusters tangle you up. Add the sopranos' sustained high A's, toss in the preposterous alto and tenor lines written by a deaf man whose inner soundtrack still resounded with unrealized ideas, and don't forget the bass lines that mix marching-song bravado and gravity-defying series of high E's and F's as we seek God "<em>über'm Sternenzelt</em>" (above the star-canopy). But it is not enough to get to the notes and sustain them: just as demanding are the changes of dynamic force (crescendos, decrescendos, and sforzandos) that Lynne has been pushing us to honor and perfect, not content to do the usual Beethovenian full-volume blast-away. Recognizing this aerobic demand, we've "run the program" straight through far more times than any of us has in previous performances. While some rehearsal sessions addressed only small chunks and technical problems, taking apart particular measures or sections, we've had time to execute the whole piece at different tempo markings, even as fatigue takes its toll, exactly as an athlete has to run repeat-intervals and train under game conditions. I think the results will be stunning.</p>
<p>The connection between the physical and the spiritual has always been strong for me--and again I honor my father the classics professor by recognizing the common root of "respiration" and "inspiration," to breathe, to be suffused with something. In multiple senses, then, we are bringing a "spiritual" dimension to this familiar work, singing it with the rhythmic conviction and technical commitment that we brought to the Negro Spirituals last season. There's a line from the old movie "Chariots of Fire" that captures it best for me: before the Olympics the devout Scottish middle-distance runner says, "God meant for me to run, and when I run fast, I feel His pleasure." Robert Shaw was right: singing the Ninth well can take you, even fleetingly, to a plane beyond the mortal, and can connect us to something or someone long gone, as it has for me.</p>
<p>Working on the Ninth this spring--and placing it in the context of the Joy we experienced with Sweet Honey--has redeemed this piece of music in ways I did not expect, from the resonance of the words themselves, to the unexpected rhythmic and dynamic complexities, to the underlying architecture of the layers of instruments and voices. When everything is clicking, whether in rehearsal or performance, when everyone from seasoned veteran to newest member is giving the music their all, a chorus of voices becomes a conduit for some bigger magic, we feel a Pleasure, a Joy, a transcendent Freude, that takes us beyond ourselves to a world of love without oppression or pretension, a celebration of the uplifting and healing power of music. If we can communicate something of this pleasure to the audience, pass along this <em>schöne Götterfunken</em> (beautiful divine spark), then all our hard work will have truly succeeded.</p>
<p>John Stenzel<br/>April 2008</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Beethoven%27s%209th" class="ztag" rel="tag">Beethoven's 9th</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Napa%20Valley%20Symphony" class="ztag" rel="tag">Napa Valley Symphony</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Sweet%20Honey%20in%20the%20Rock" class="ztag" rel="tag">Sweet Honey in the Rock</a></span> 
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   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Members of the World Community</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/04/members_of_the_world_community.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.52</id>
   
   <published>2008-04-09T07:03:06Z</published>
   <updated>2008-04-09T20:22:23Z</updated>
   
   <summary> Wow. We just sang with Sweet Honey in the Rock. To a sold-out Zellerbach Hall (~ 2,000 people). Sweet Honey in the Rock is a women&apos;s group (now in their 34th season!) that I first heard in college and...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Collaborations" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p>Wow. We just sang with Sweet Honey in the Rock. To a sold-out Zellerbach Hall (~ 2,000 people).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Sweet_Honey.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Sweet_Honey_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="Sweet Honey.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="Sweet Honey.jpg" border="0" id="Sweet_Honey.jpg"/></a><a href="http://www.sweethoney.com/">Sweet Honey in the Rock</a> is a women's group (now in their 34th season!) that I first heard in college and have loved ever since, "raising her voice in hope, love, justice, peace, and resistance." They have the most amazing rich and beautiful sound; as a low alto I was always particularly impressed by the richness and range of their low voices. (A great intro to Sweet Honey is their 25th anniversary album; their new children's album was nominated for a Grammy last year.) I have been in a couple of groups that have sung some of their arrangements; we felt a distant kinship through singing their music. Well, Saturday night (April 5, 2008) it became an upfront-and-personal kinship.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lynne_and_Carol.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lynne_and_Carol_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="Lynne and Carol.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="Lynne and Carol.jpg" border="0" id="Lynne_and_Carol.jpg"/></a>Our wonderful director, Dr. Lynne Morrow, and PME have enjoyed working with <a href="http://calperfs.berkeley.edu/">Cal Performances</a>. They invited her to work with Sweet Honey in the Rock for the performance of the West Coast premier of a choral work written by Sweet Honey, each member writing a movement, called Indaba. Indaba is "a Zulu word from South Africa meaning to bring together the right people…at the right time…to ask the right questions…in order to arrive at the right answers. It is an invitation to gather for the telling of our stories." The piece is a musical dialogue between youth and their elders, working on getting along and sharing their visions, ending with an invitation to the entire community to come together in a celebratory "Joy in the Morning".</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/OakArts_Soloists.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/OakArts_Soloists_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="OakArts Soloists.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="OakArts Soloists.jpg" border="0" id="OakArts_Soloists.jpg"/></a>Fortunately for us, Lynne thought that the <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">Pacific Mozart Ensemble</a> was the right adult chorus for the job. The youth chorus was the <a href="http://www.oakarts.org/">Oakland School for the Arts</a> (OSA) Youth Choir, composed of Vocal Emphasis high school students. What an amazing group of young women and men they are. In order to participate in the group, they have to maintain at least a 3.0 grade average. Check out their website and find out more about this amazing school (and check out their 'April Fool' <a href="http://www.oakarts.org/OSA_Newspapers/">newsletter link</a> on their home page when you need a lift for the day!). They are total pros and were great fun to talk with; we are already planning to collaborate with them again.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Savannah_-_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Savannah_-_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 128px" title="Savannah - small.jpg" height="128" width="150" alt="Savannah - small.jpg" border="0" id="Savannah_-_small.jpg"/></a>We also had several wonderful instrumentalists and percussionists playing with us, one of whom is 14-year old Savannah Harris playing drums. All I can say is, remember her name. She's a star.</p>
<p>There were several solos for both the youth and the adults throughout the work. Valerie sang the part of the Mother in Get Along (wow). Angie, Cindy, Kim, Alexis and I sang step-outs in "Vision for Tomorrow" (with Greg and John doing some vocal percussion). I had a total of 16 lines, 8 in the beginning and 8 in the end. Shouldn't be hard to memorize, right? The first 8 lines were the most difficult lines I have ever had to memorize! <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_Soloists.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_Soloists_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="PME Soloists.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="PME Soloists.jpg" border="0" id="PME_Soloists.jpg"/></a>And I've memorized a lot of music in my time, in many different genres and languages. I just couldn't get those 8 lines to stick in the right order-I swear I've sung them at least 250 times. They'd stick for 2 hours and then be gone again. I made mnemonics for them, I wrote them down many many times, tried every trick. Fortunately I got them right at the performance-and of course since then I can't get them out of my head.</p>
<p>Through a series of twists and turns, a week before the concert I found out that I would be privileged to sing a lead-in solo in the last song of the piece, Joy in the Morning, a rousing gospel song written by Sweet Honey member Carol Maillard. It starts with a spoken prayer by an OSA student rapper -what a great job he did-followed by me singing the first verse with both choirs and Sweet Honey. WAY past the 'dream come true' place. WAY.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lark_n_Carol.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Lark_n_Carol_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="Lark n Carol.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="Lark n Carol.jpg" border="0" id="Lark_n_Carol.jpg"/></a>During our first rehearsal, after the first run-through Carol whispered in my ear "sing it like this is the last time you'll ever get to sing it", and 'start it with complete intention'. What, she could hear the underlying sound of me quaking in my boots?? Sometimes as a performer it's really hard to shut down the 'little voices' inside your head- the ones that talk while you're singing, mind you-- 'sing this note higher, sing this one quieter, OMG, did I just make a mistake??" -- That keeps you from completely being present for the music. So I sang it again. I could tell she wasn't completely happy, so I went home and kept working on it.</p>
<p>Saturday night (April 5, 2008). Center stage with SWEET HONEY.<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Group_Shot_on_Stage_-_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Group_Shot_on_Stage_-_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 450px; HEIGHT: 135px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" title="Group Shot on Stage - small.jpg" height="135" width="450" alt="Group Shot on Stage - small.jpg" border="0" id="Group_Shot_on_Stage_-_small.jpg"/></a>We sing through the first 6 movements, and from my perspective it's going well. We get to Joy in the Morning. And just as Lynne lifts her baton, the sound system goes crazy. Whirring and LOUD feedback and pops all over the place. We don't move a muscle. Then I move away from the rapper to see if that helps. We wait for it to stop. The rapper starts the prayer; when he starts his microphone isn't turned on. I didn't even think about whether mine was on; I was working on being as present as I could. I start with "I woke up this morning, to a new day shining bright' with as much joy as I could bring-and the microphone is off. At least the first few rows of Zellerbach heard it…nothing to do but keep going, and fortunately the mic came on at the end of the first line. I gave it all I had and then right next to me Carol starts the next verse and just takes it home. I float (it felt like it anyway) back to the chorus for the end of the song.</p>
<p>Dr. Ysaye Barnwell then taught all of us a chant that comes from a people living in the rain forest, where they believe that the rain forest is God; they live inside God.</p>
<p>When we were saying 'goodbye' and 'thank you' to Sweet Honey at the end of the show, I mentioned that next week we would be singing Beethoven's Ninth. Carol's response was 'well now you can go sing it with a little more soul'.</p>
<p>From "Joy in the Morning" to "Ode to Joy".</p>
<p>Indaba.</p>
<p>-- Lark Coryell</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Cal%20Performances" class="ztag" rel="tag">Cal Performances</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Oakland%20School%20for%20the%20Arts" class="ztag" rel="tag">Oakland School for the Arts</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Sweet%20Honey%20in%20the%20Rock" class="ztag" rel="tag">Sweet Honey in the Rock</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Zellerbach" class="ztag" rel="tag">Zellerbach</a></span> 
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</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Fund Raiser Videos</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/03/fund_raiser_videos.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.51</id>
   
   <published>2008-03-10T06:24:54Z</published>
   <updated>2008-03-10T06:25:03Z</updated>
   
   <summary> Here&apos;s a little taste of the 2008 Fund Raiser. First, Kate and Kevin give us some much needed Therapy, then Lynne knocks Porgy and Bess out of the park.Here&apos;s the pics from the event: PME 2008 Fundraiser Pics. Enjoy....</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Fund Raiser" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
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<p>Here's a little taste of the 2008 Fund Raiser. First, Kate and Kevin give us some much needed Therapy, then Lynne knocks Porgy and Bess out of the park.<br/>Here's the pics from the event: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/10413429@N08/sets/72157603976918950/show/">PME 2008 Fundraiser Pics</a>.</p>
<p>Enjoy.</p>
<p>Therapy:<br/><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/9KMFHfg5eDE"/>
<param name="wmode" value="transparent"/>
<embed height="355" width="425" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/9KMFHfg5eDE"/></object></p>
<p>My Man is Gone:<br/><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/4FJsMhZFTc0"/>
<param name="wmode" value="transparent"/>
<embed height="355" width="425" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/4FJsMhZFTc0"/></object></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Broadway" class="ztag" rel="tag">Broadway</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Gershwin" class="ztag" rel="tag">Gershwin</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Jonathan%20Larson" class="ztag" rel="tag">Jonathan Larson</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/My%20Man%20is%20Gone%20Now" class="ztag" rel="tag">My Man is Gone Now</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Porgy%20and%20Bess" class="ztag" rel="tag">Porgy and Bess</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Therapy" class="ztag" rel="tag">Therapy</a></span> 
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   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Putting it together.  Bit by bit.</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2008/01/putting_it_together_bit_by_bit.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2008:/blog//1.50</id>
   
   <published>2008-01-21T18:53:39Z</published>
   <updated>2008-01-21T18:53:45Z</updated>
   
   <summary> I love the PME fundraiser. It&apos;s the one time each season when a whole bunch of us get to share our inner-divaness, sing our favorite songs, and discover and admire the talent among our fellow peemers. The Big Night...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Fund Raiser" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p>I love the PME fundraiser. It's the one time each season when a whole bunch of us get to share our inner-divaness, sing our favorite songs, and discover and admire the talent among our fellow peemers. The Big Night features an entire show of new, old and sometimes unusual repertoire, an occasional costume, some fairly uncomplicated choralography and a bit of witty patter, ending with what we hope are wild applause.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Fundraiser_Auditions.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Fundraiser_Auditions_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Fundraiser Auditions.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Fundraiser Auditions.jpg" border="0" id="Fundraiser_Auditions.jpg"/></a>It all begins with an Audition. No, the capital A is not a typo. Auditions are a big deal, even for seasoned performers. Imagine there's this Committee of your peers (five in this case, plus our music director, Lynne) sitting there, mostly smiling at you, listening earnestly, really wanting to like your song -- but they have this challenging job to do which is to put together, bit by bit, an amazing program. But I'm getting ahead of myself.</p>
<p>The first and almost hardest part is picking the repertoire you're going to put up there for Scrutiny. (That S definitely needs to be a capital). The choices are entirely up to the auditionee, based on whatever the theme of the show is. This year, it's about love or the lack thereof, so the field is pretty wide open.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Sisters_K_at_the_Pork_Stump.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Sisters_K_at_the_Pork_Stump_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 133px" title="Sisters K at the Pork Stump.jpg" height="133" width="200" alt="Sisters K at the Pork Stump.jpg" border="0" id="Sisters_K_at_the_Pork_Stump.jpg"/></a>I search for months through my dog-eared collections of Gershwin and The Best of Broadway, rifle through my piano bench stuffed with photocopies of solos gone by, none of which seem to have all the pages, and finally go online to get some of the newer stuff. (This is deeply cool because you can get a lot of sheet music in different keys, on the spot, downloaded right into your computer). Then, I spread everything out on the dining room table and cull. I agonize. I whine. Maybe I am too old to sing this one anymore…can I get through this one without being reminded of that horrible ex-boyfriend in 1987…when will I get over my fixation with channeling Julie Andrews? (The answer to this last one is -- never!) I give up and call my singing partner, Kim Keeton, who is also PME's program committee liaison, and pick her brain. She is her usual paragon of patience and a fount of good ideas, and finally, the list is complete: a duet with Kim, a trio with Kim and Angie, a trio with Becca and Victor, a trio with Peggy and Kevin, and two solos. OK, then. That is until my dear friend, Lucia, over a couple of glasses of wine, plays me this duet called <em>Therapy</em> which her astoundingly talented daughter, Emily, has just performed. I KNOW I have to do it. There is no contest -- Kevin is the only choice for the guy-part so I gently (sort of) twist his arm and he says yes, if I insist. I do. That makes seven altogether. An embarrassment of riches. I am not embarrassed. What does this tell you about me?</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kim_Polly_and_Emily.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kim_Polly_and_Emily_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Kim Polly and Emily.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Kim Polly and Emily.jpg" border="0" id="Kim_Polly_and_Emily.jpg"/></a>Finding rehearsal time outside of our regular Monday nights becomes the next challenge. This requires coordinating multiple schedules including those of our accompanist, Kymry, who is a masterful pianist and really in demand right now. This requires patience. Oh, that. Somehow, we find a few spare half hours that works for everyone and astoundingly, very few of the songs need more than one session.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the audition schedule is filling up. A week before the first night of auditions, there are over 50(!) songs on the list. Kim tells the group that the Committee can only use maybe 23 of them. Wow.</p>
<p>At this point in the game, I am always equal parts determined and resigned. I know that even if I knock every one of my tunes out of the park, which is pretty unlikely, there's no way most of them are going to get in. Still, I've got to give it everything I have and not think about what happens after. Be in the moment. Savor the experience. Yeah, right.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Fundraiser_Auditions2.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Fundraiser_Auditions2_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Fundraiser Auditions2.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Fundraiser Auditions2.jpg" border="0" id="Fundraiser_Auditions2.jpg"/></a>PME holds open auditions so we can cheer for our peemer-buddies. I've always thought this was a goofy idea, but on the first night of auditions I'm grateful. When I arrive, there are a few folks in the audience and the Committee is assembled in front, with their pencils poised and their ears attuned. (I've been on this Committee several times, and you couldn't ask for a nicer group of people to vet you. Still, I know what they are going to have to do. And it will involve me. And my songs. Sigh).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Spuddle_Gear.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Spuddle_Gear_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Spuddle Gear.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Spuddle Gear.jpg" border="0" id="Spuddle_Gear.jpg"/></a>I show up right before <em>Starting Here,</em> <em>Starting Now</em>, which features Peggy, Kevin and I. I love singing with these two terrific musicians and I love the song, too. It goes well. We smile at each other. One down. <em>Therapy</em> is next. Right before we start, Kevin tells me that he has worked out some "moves" to go with the song. It will be a surprise, he says. You'll love them, he says. This worries me. Kevin can be a wild man. He has obviously taken temporary leave of his senses. He has forgotten that our greatest fear is that we will would look at each other at some point and get completely hysterical (Therapy is really funny). He throws me a curve -- and that's putting it mildly -- at the very end. It's unbelievably silly. The audience laughs and somehow we keep it together. Whew. This is good sign.</p>
<p>I sit down. My heart is beating hard, but not uncontrollably, also a good sign.</p>
<p>Kevin sings a solo next. Talk about a study in contrasts. It knocks me out. It's so beautiful that I actually stop thinking about ME and just enjoy listening. Then he sings a duet with Victor, also breathtakingly lovely. I want to kiss them both afterward, it's that good.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Becca.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Becca_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Becca.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Becca.jpg" border="0" id="Becca.jpg"/></a>There is supposed to be a break after, but the Committee asks if I would like to do the next song (I have three more that evening, all in a row). I'm feeling so Zen after hearing those boys sing that I decide to go for it -- <em>But Not for Me</em>, one of my two solos. It is the first Gershwin song I ever learned, lovingly taught to me by my dad, a formidable jazz pianist who was, at the time, in the throes of a break-up with one of his girlfriends. Dad was really good at being maudlin, but he was always so charming about it that no one minded. He's been gone now for more than 20 years, but I'm so calm I can almost feel his presence in the room. I look at the audience and see Victor mouthing the words. It turns out it's one of his favorites. Too bad he's not on the committee, but at least I know that <em>someone</em> likes it.</p>
<p>After the break, Kim and I do a duet from "Jekyll and Hyde." I look at her for dramatic affect at the end of the piece and forget the last note. Splat. She tries not to wince. Lynne says something about it needing to be higher. I want to die, after which I mysteriously self-combust, a mysterious reminder of an audition gone sideways. No such luck, there's one more. It can only go up from here, right? I am praying silently.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kate_Sets_it_Up.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Kate_Sets_it_Up_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 113px; HEIGHT: 182px" title="Kate Sets it Up.jpg" height="182" width="113" alt="Kate Sets it Up.jpg" border="0" id="Kate_Sets_it_Up.jpg"/></a>How apt -- it's <em>What I Did for Love</em> from "A Chorus Line." I close my eyes for a half second and think about the character. Kymry is waiting for my high sign. They're all waiting. And the light goes on. The character is in the midst of Auditions. Oh duh. And she's singing about love and believing in yourself and putting it out there for the world to see. I feel like a Kodak commercial. I plant my feet, take a deep breath and away I go. "Kiss today goodbye and point me toward tomorrow….we did what we had to do…won't forget…can't regret…what I did for love…" Amen to that.</p>
<p>Kate Berenson<br/>January, 2008</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Chorus%20Line" class="ztag" rel="tag">Chorus Line</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Gershwin" class="ztag" rel="tag">Gershwin</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/PME" class="ztag" rel="tag">PME</a></span> 
</p>]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Blah, Blah, Humblog</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/12/blah_blah_humblog.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.49</id>
   
   <published>2007-12-22T00:18:36Z</published>
   <updated>2007-12-22T00:24:45Z</updated>
   
   <summary> PME veteran volunteer&apos;s preview from within, Dec. 17, 2007 I arrived at Notre Dame des Victoires last Saturday night at 6:45pm, early for my volunteer duties for PME&apos;s 8pm Dec. 15th Winter Canticles concert. I live in San Francisco,...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Dave Brubeck" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
         <category term="Performance" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><strong>PME veteran volunteer's preview from within, Dec. 17, 2007</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/The_Woman_at_NDV.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/The_Woman_at_NDV_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="The Woman at NDV.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="The Woman at NDV.jpg" border="0" id="The_Woman_at_NDV.jpg"/></a>I arrived at <a href="http://www.ndvsf.org/">Notre Dame des Victoires</a> last Saturday night at 6:45pm, early for my volunteer duties for <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">PME</a>'s 8pm Dec. 15th Winter Canticles concert. I live in San Francisco, not like most everyone else, and it was an easy hop to the church. I even beat most of the chorus members who had a 7pm call time themselves. There had been a mass in the church which finished at 6:30pm, so rehearsal time was unusually tight and many were stuck in holiday traffic or hoping for parking karma as they circled the streets or garage.</p>
<p>Dressed warmly with long coat, hat and gloves, because I knew I'd be sitting outside the entry doors selling tickets, I proceeded to greet the singers and any early concert-goers as they arrived. I love this part as I know so many personally. It's really part of the fun of volunteering.</p>
<p>What else does a PME volunteer do, besides enjoy a wonderful concert for free?</p>
<ul>
<li>Well, while waiting for our volunteer leader I accepted to hold 2 tickets for will-call for one of the singers' family, then proceeded to sell those 2 tickets to an early attendee wanting to be sure to get in. (I'd handle the paperwork once we officially were set-up for business….all was documented on an envelope mind you. No need for the treasurer to worry.)</li>
<li><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/I_am_With_the_Band_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/I_am_With_the_Band_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="I am With the Band small.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="I am With the Band small.jpg" border="0" id="I_am_With_the_Band_small.jpg"/></a>I helped the <a href="http://www.quartetsanfrancisco.com/">Quartet San Francisco</a> volunteer find and position a table for selling their cds, checking with the priest for permission of course.</li>
<li>I told a couple they had time to get a bite to eat and suggested a place. And for yet another couple, I promised to hold tickets for them to purchase following a quick dinner.</li>
<li>I surreptitiously took a floral bouquet from a singer, keeping it hidden from Lynne Morrow, found a hiding place just inside the entry in a cabinet and agreed with a wink when I should bring it down the aisle after the performance as a surprise from the singers.</li>
<li>I held the door open as singers carried steps, staging and sound equipment for set-up. Most attendees probably have no idea that PME brings its own risers, sets them up and takes them down, loading them back downstairs and into a truck at every concert. And they sing too!!</li>
<li>I listened, not for the first time, about how to access the WC before and during the concert, being mindful of the concern of entering through an alley via an unlocked door vs. taking a very slow elevator. Each venue has its particular idiosyncrasies and its own personalities.</li>
<li>When our volunteer leader arrived, we shuffled tables for a bit to find the optimum spot and configuration and I proceeded to fold programs while waiting for the cash box and tickets to be ready for use.</li>
<li>At the same time I continued to greet concert goers, suggesting to some that they had time for some window shopping and to come back after 7:30pm when we'd be open for business. Several chose to hang out in the lobby, mostly because not only was it very cold outside (for SF standards), but also because they could see the chorus rehearsing, and even hear a little, through the glass doors ….always an impressive little hors d'oeuvres before the main course…or chorus!</li>
<li><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/NDV_Altar_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/NDV_Altar_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="NDV Altar small.jpg" height="200" width="150" alt="NDV Altar small.jpg" border="0" id="NDV_Altar_small.jpg"/></a>Several volunteers from the same family (husband, 14yr. old son and 8yr. old daughter of one of the performers) were also kept busy folding programs, then collecting tickets and explaining the open seating once the doors were open.</li>
<li>Out in the cold we proceeded to delve out the will-call tickets and sell the remaining tickets to the PME concert attendees…..while announcing that the doors would be open in approximately 5 minutes, several times, to much laughter. No one was upset that the singers were still rehearsing; just a little cold that's all.</li>
<li>I got to use my French with a parishioner who came to inquire about the concert. The concert was, after all, in San Francisco's only French church.</li>
<li>By the way, not once did I question whether someone was a student or a senior or if their tickets were misplaced or in question. I've found giving everyone the benefit of the doubt is always the best way to go, if you want to enjoy volunteering. Also, concert goers are worth it!</li>
</ul>
<p>After that, once the first note was sung by the chorus, I quickly was relieved of my duties and moved into the next to last pew for a wonderful evening's concert. My volunteer duties were essentially over, except for the march of the flowers. Even my fingers warmed up as I clapped with mittened hands.</p>
<p>What a joyful way to spend a holiday evening with the Pacific Mozart Ensemble and Quartet San Francisco in perfect collaboration. The usual blog entries talk about the concert and the talents of the performers. Well, this one is a glimpse into some of the action surrounding these well planned events.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Post_Show_at_Irish_Bank_3.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Post_Show_at_Irish_Bank_3_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Post Show at Irish Bank 3.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="Post Show at Irish Bank 3.jpg" border="0" id="Post_Show_at_Irish_Bank_3.jpg"/></a>As a side note, another part of the joys of volunteering is joining the singers for some singer-eating and drinking afterwards at the <a href="http://www.theirishbank.com/">Irish Bank</a> down the street! But why did they sit outside?</p>
<p>Warmly,<br/>Susie Shoaf (very longtime PME volunteer supporter)</p>
<p>For all the pics from St Mary's and NDV Follow the link... <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/10413429@N08/sets/72157603518967265/show/">PME Christmas Concert 07</a></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Christmas" class="ztag" rel="tag">Christmas</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Dave%20Brubeck" class="ztag" rel="tag">Dave Brubeck</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Notre%20Dame%20des%20Victoires" class="ztag" rel="tag">Notre Dame des Victoires</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Quartet%20San%20Francisco" class="ztag" rel="tag">Quartet San Francisco</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Sanford%20Dole" class="ztag" rel="tag">Sanford Dole</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/The%20Irish%20Bank" class="ztag" rel="tag">The Irish Bank</a></span> 
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</entry>
<entry>
   <title>PME Winter Concert - Community at Work</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/12/pme_winter_concert_community_a.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.48</id>
   
   <published>2007-12-01T20:25:58Z</published>
   <updated>2007-12-03T01:00:24Z</updated>
   
   <summary> In our time, community is not necessarily a given. We often distance ourselves from our families, childhood friends, our religious backgrounds and our parents&apos; expectations. In the process of finding ourselves, we can easily lose our connection to others....</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Performance" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/IMG_1827.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/IMG_1827_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="IMG_1827.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="IMG_1827.jpg" border="0" id="IMG_1827.jpg"/></a>In our time, community is not necessarily a given. We often distance ourselves from our families, childhood friends, our religious backgrounds and our parents' expectations. In the process of finding ourselves, we can easily lose our connection to others. I work at a <a href="http://www.awsna.org/">Waldorf</a>-inspired school, and one of the biggest themes of the education is to appreciate and utilize the unique talents of each individual, and simultaneously to bring each one, recognizing vast differences, into harmonious community. This is no easy task in any arena, be it with faculty and staff, board, parent community, or in the classroom. Often, when preparing for a challenging conversation or meeting, I think about <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">Pacific Mozart Ensemble</a> as a great example of successful community at work. Here, at every level, there is enthusiasm, responsibility, cooperation, and appreciation for each other…despite our "stuff" which will always be there. Preparing and performing our three scheduled concerts, which always include a huge scope of musical styles, and often a surprising variety of extra gigs is a tall order for people who work full-time jobs doing something else. Somehow, we manage to do just this year after year, and in the process have become a sort of large extended family as well as a smoothly running organization.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-3.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-3_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="PME at KDFC Tree Lighting 2007 -3.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="PME at KDFC Tree Lighting 2007 -3.jpg" border="0" id="PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-3.jpg"/></a>This fall, for the first time in several years, PME is performing a holiday concert (<a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/view-show-tickets?id=9">The Winter Canticles</a>, featuring special guests <a href="http://www.quartetsanfrancisco.com/">Quartet San Francisco</a>). Lovely! Not having sung holiday music for many years, I was curious to dig into the repertoire. I could imagine the old chestnuts and standard stuff from my college years, but was sure that we would be singing music much more challenging and fresh. Well, these pieces are stunning; it is going to be a concert not to be missed. We are performing in many small groups as well as in an ensemble of the whole, and the variety of music will make for a most interesting and inspiring concert. Usually we perform our fall concert in November, and this, being a holiday concert, is midway into December. Consequently, we have a relatively luxurious time to prepare.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/119653949361_PME_KPIX_Rehearsal.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/119653949361_PME_KPIX_Rehearsal_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="PME KPIX Rehearsal.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="PME KPIX Rehearsal.jpg" border="0" id="119653949361_PME_KPIX_Rehearsal.jpg"/></a>As alto section leader, I am grateful for the extra couple of weeks. It can be tricky to support and inspire the section to be well prepared and feel excited, as well as help us to sound our best. Early in the fall the whole group attended all-day retreat at which two wonderful singing teachers (<a href="http://www.sonoma.edu/performingarts/music/dir_wittbutlers.shtml">Susan Witt-Butler</a> and James Toland) worked with us on vocal technique and German pronunciation, so we had a substantial experience of conscious singing. In preparing for the alto sectional I solicited suggestions from the mezzos (a more correct term for the voice type of the singers in the alto section) for how to use our time together, and received a couple of recommendations for voice teachers. In the end, I decided that we would better use our time to put into practice what we were already given at our retreat. So we used our time to review and practice what she had brought, to share relevant techniques from our personal voice teachers, with an ear to the particular vocal challenges of this concert, and to work on some challenging passages. As always, I was quite happy with our overall sound and grateful for how generous and cooperative my colleagues are, particularly when being subjected to exercises that I think might be helpful. We are an extremely genial bunch who truly respect each other's talents, enjoy each other's company, and are interested in each other's contributions, so the two or so hours sped happily by. An "Alto Cosmo (pink martini) Party immediately followed the sectional. These parties, at which we drink cosmos out of a variety of special martini glasses and eat delicious munchies, are fast becoming a beloved tradition in our section. Thank you, Gretchen and Emily! We began with nibbles and cocktails just for us. In an hour or so were joined by other "peemers" (members of PME) and friends for an enjoyable evening.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/DSC00276.JPG"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/DSC00276_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="DSC00276.JPG" height="150" width="200" alt="DSC00276.JPG" border="0" id="DSC00276.JPG"/></a>This was a solid start, but some of the members of the section wanted to have a mezzo "note-learning" session too. Often we work on this in extra rehearsals with the whole ensemble, but did not have any scheduled for this concert. Valerie took the reins and organized another Saturday session, this time devoted to repeating and learning passages for accuracy of pitch, rhythm, and dynamic…you know, getting it in your ear…followed by more eating, of course. Everyone who came felt it was time well spent, and indeed, we are singing with much more confidence now.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Peggy_at_Zorn_Concert.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Peggy_at_Zorn_Concert_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="Peggy at Zorn Concert.jpg" height="200" width="150" alt="Peggy at Zorn Concert.jpg" border="0" id="Peggy_at_Zorn_Concert.jpg"/></a>I have been feeling good about our overall preparation for the concert, but now that we are two weeks away, the devil is showing himself in the details. At the last rehearsal, we realized that we had not worked out the word underlay when we added German and English verses to the Finnish carol we will be performing, and instantly, at least three people stepped up to offer working it out for the section. Sure enough, within twenty-four hours, a revised score is ready to go out to our section and possibly the whole group. Thank you, Emily, Alexis, and Claudia. What a great team!</p>
<p>At my school, the board and faculty regularly recite this verse from Rudolf Steiner:</p>
<blockquote><em><em>The healthy social life is found when,<br/>In the mirror of each human soul,<br/>The whole community finds its reflection,<br/>And when, in the community,<br/>The strength and virtue of each one is living.</em></em></blockquote>
<p>Pacific Mozart Ensemble weekly strives to do this, and I think we do it very well. From many years of audience comments, we know that you sense something very special when listening to us make music. Often you say that it feels like we love singing with each other. Well, we do. Come to the concert and hear for yourself.</p>
<p>- Peggy Rock</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Quartet%20San%20Francisco" class="ztag" rel="tag">Quartet San Francisco</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Waldorf" class="ztag" rel="tag">Waldorf</a></span> 
</p>]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>PME Kicks Off the Holiday Season</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/11/pme_kick_of_the_holiday_season.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.47</id>
   
   <published>2007-11-19T04:26:14Z</published>
   <updated>2007-11-19T17:34:04Z</updated>
   
   <summary> About a month ago, Lark came to us with another cool sounding gig opportunity - PME had been invited to sing at the KDFC Holiday Party during the Embarcadero Center Building Lighting Ceremony at the Hyatt Regency. Despite having...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Performance" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Embarcadero_Center.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Embarcadero_Center_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 115px" title="Embarcadero Center.jpg" height="115" width="200" alt="Embarcadero Center.jpg" border="0" id="Embarcadero_Center.jpg"/></a>About a month ago, Lark came to us with another cool sounding gig opportunity - <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">PME</a> had been invited to sing at the <a href="http://www.kdfc.com/">KDFC</a> Holiday Party during the <a href="http://www.embarcaderocenter.com/ec/Holidays/index.html">Embarcadero Center Building Lighting Ceremony</a> at the Hyatt Regency. Despite having lived in the Bay Area for years, I had never gone to see the lighting of the Hyatt Christmas tree, along with the lights that adorn many of the buildings in the financial district. I wasn't the only first timer out of the 25 or so PMErs that had signed up to do this performance.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/View_from_the_Stage_--_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/View_from_the_Stage_--_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 149px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="View from the Stage -- small.jpg" height="200" width="149" alt="View from the Stage -- small.jpg" border="0" id="View_from_the_Stage_--_small.jpg"/></a>The first thing we saw when walking into the fully decked (and already teeming with people) hotel lobby, was an enormous house size Christmas ornament…or it may have been a piece of modern art and a permanent part of the lobby décor that just happens to look like a Christmas ornament, I wasn't really sure. Near it stood the 20 ft tree below a starry winter sky, created from hundreds of strings of silver lights hung from the high ceiling. Outside the lobby windows, people were already finding their holiday spirit on the ice skating rink. You could almost think you somewhere colder than San Francisco.</p>
<p>We were shown to our green room, where we had a chance to run some of the pieces on the evening's set list. I realized that despite having made sure I knew the melodies to the carols we were about to sing, I had forgotten about the fact that sight reading lyrics in English was not going to be quite as easy for me as it is for the native speakers. Shortly after an unusual sound check (audience was already there), it was time to perform.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="PME at KDFC Tree Lighting 2007 - small.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="PME at KDFC Tree Lighting 2007 - small.jpg" border="0" id="PME_at_KDFC_Tree_Lighting_2007_-_small.jpg"/></a>Much of our material was pieces that we are working on for PME's holiday concerts. This was both helpful, and scary. Helpful in that it was pieces we knew and it gave us a great opportunity to gauge our progress and readiness, scary because this was the first time we were actually going to sing the music in front of an audience.</p>
<p>Before we even knew it, the first set was over. We couldn't really be sure that our voices were heard off stage; with the cavernous open lobby space all around us we felt we had to work hard at projecting. Apparently, we should not have worried. Our support crew (Thanks Penny, Jacquie and Corinne!) reported that the music was clearly audible in front of the stage.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_then_Puppet_Show_--_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_then_Puppet_Show_--_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 149px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="PME then Puppet Show -- small.jpg" height="200" width="149" alt="PME then Puppet Show -- small.jpg" border="0" id="PME_then_Puppet_Show_--_small.jpg"/></a>The creatures that were getting on stage as we were exiting were a whimsical sight. The Velocity Circus, dressed like trees, unicorns, fairies, trolls and the like put on (what must have been) a wonderful show. Sadly, we were waiting in the wings and unless you were 6 ft tall, you could only see some of the acrobatics performed high above the stage. Judging by the audience reactions, they were great.</p>
<p>We were back on stage and before our second set, one of the children from the audience got the honors to turn on the giant light switch that lit the tree and the starry sky above. However much we may feel that Christmas comes too early every year, seeing the beautiful lights come on and caroling with a group of good friends, under a tree, somehow made me feel that we've now truly entered the holiday season. Without snow, I've had many a year when that Holiday feeling has somehow eluded me.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Having_a_Good_Time_--_small.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Having_a_Good_Time_--_small_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 149px; HEIGHT: 200px" title="Having a Good Time -- small.jpg" height="200" width="149" alt="Having a Good Time -- small.jpg" border="0" id="Having_a_Good_Time_--_small.jpg"/></a>Naturally, in the true PME fashion, some of us gathered at the lobby bar afterwards for some snacks and festive beverages. We traded stories about our most meaningful PME moments and generally felt incredibly happy about being choir geeks…oh, and the holidays.</p>
<p>-Mari Marjamaa</p>
<p>P.S. Thank you Lark for getting us the gig, and for all your hard work organizing the troops! Thank you Lynne for fearlessly leading us through this pre-concert exercise.</p>
<p>P.P.S. For more and bigger pics of the event visit <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/10413429@N08/sets/72157603232810339/">KDFC Christmas Party</a></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Embarcadero%20Center" class="ztag" rel="tag">Embarcadero Center</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/KDFC" class="ztag" rel="tag">KDFC</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Velocity%20Circus" class="ztag" rel="tag">Velocity Circus</a></span> 
</p>]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>A New Look for PME</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/09/a_new_look_for_pme.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.46</id>
   
   <published>2007-09-23T19:33:23Z</published>
   <updated>2007-09-23T19:45:54Z</updated>
   
   <summary> by Lark Schumacher Coryell &quot;So what do you do&quot;? &quot;I&apos;m a strategic brand identity manager&quot;. (Blank stare.) &quot;Uh, what??&quot; &quot;I work with companies to create and manage a consistent look and feel-identity if you will-that reflects a company&apos;s authentic...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Green_Fest_2007.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/Green_Fest_2007_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 153px" title="Green Fest 2007.jpg" height="153" width="200" alt="Green Fest 2007.jpg" border="0" id="Green_Fest_2007.jpg"/></a>by Lark Schumacher Coryell</p>
<p>"So what do you do"? "I'm a strategic brand identity manager". (Blank stare.) "Uh, what??"</p>
<p>"I work with companies to create and manage a consistent look and feel-identity if you will-that reflects a company's authentic brand, for consistent recognition across all media worldwide." (Eyes glaze over.)</p>
<p>So let me present to you a case study. Start with an incredible chorus that has been around for over 25 years. Thanks to the vision and amazing musical programming of <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/view-others?id=27">Dick Grant</a> (and now <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/view-others?id=25">Lynne Morrow</a> also), this chorus has become known as the Bay Area's most innovative chorus, the Pacific Mozart Ensemble.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/J_P-CityClub-41-compr.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/J_P-CityClub-41-compr_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 132px" title="PME Rocks You Like Hurricane" height="132" width="200" alt="PME Rocks You Like Hurricane" border="0" id="J_P-CityClub-41-compr.jpg"/></a>Ah, <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/">Pacific Mozart Ensemble</a>. That shouldn't be too hard. Classical chorus. Take a picture of Mozart, morph it into the Pacific Ocean, add a few musical notes, and you're done. Right? However, there's just one problem-- the Pacific Mozart Ensemble isn't just a classical chorus. PME sings all kinds of music-"from Beethoven to Brubeck to the Beatles" - this year alone. Really. We sing with all kinds of friends and collaborators-Kent Nagano and the Berlin Deutsche Symphonie-Orchester (can you say <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2006/02/final_grammy_wrapup.html">Grammy</a> nomination, baby?); <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/dave_brubeck/">Dave Brubeck</a> (Dave Brubeck!!), <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2006/10/pme_rocks_with_sufjan_again.html">Sufjan Stevens</a> (amazing), <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2005/11/concert_day_at_carnegie.html">Meredith Monk</a> (in Carnegie Hall, mind you), just to name a few. And we do all of it extremely well. With a huge amount of heart and soul and professionalism.</p>
<p>Oh. Well. Now what? Now the real work starts. Time to sit down with the musical director, artistic director, and board members, to come up with a list of all the attributes that authentically represent PME. Next, figure out all the identity elements that will be needed. Bring on board a small PME brand 'swat team' to review and provide expertise. Next, write a Creative Brief for the whole project.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_logo_RGB_blog-2.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_logo_RGB_blog-2_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 83px" title="PME Logo" height="83" width="200" alt="PME Logo" border="0" id="PME_logo_RGB_blog-2.jpg"/></a>Then, beg the best designer you know (Margaret Swart, <a href="http://www.swartdesign.com/">Swart Design</a>) to create a logo that reflects all the different aspects of PME, and then ask for her help with the rest of the identity elements too. After that, beg the best web architect and marketing manager you know (Roger Coryell, <a href="http://www.brandhound.com/">BrandHound</a>) to help you. It helps that I'm lucky enough to be married to him (though during this project I'm not so sure he was feeling the same way ;-)). Create a timeline so that the new look and feel is ready for the start of PME's 28th season.</p>
<p>Send the identity elements (logo, colors, typography) to Louise Casselman, the very talented designer who has been creating our season mailers for many years. Go to the printing plant to review and check the colors for the printing as it's coming off the press.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_website_screenshot_blog2.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/PME_website_screenshot_blog2_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 166px" title="PME Website Screenshot" height="166" width="200" alt="PME Website Screenshot" border="0" id="PME_website_screenshot_blog2.jpg"/></a>Back to the website. Assign people (OK, beg again) to take pictures, create mp3s, and get content ready. Create the website look and feel, navigation, architecture and content management system. Get the website built and tested. Put all the content in. Review, review, and review again. (Sounds simple, right? Hah.) 'Stealth launch' the new website on a Sunday night to test everything again so it's ready for the grand unveiling at PME's Monday night rehearsal. (Except that one of our members goes to the website to get a phone number and sees it, and sends a note out to the PME chat list to tell everyone about the cool new website. There really is no such thing as a stealth launch.) Test into the wee hours of the morning.</p>
<p>Thank the many people who have helped get this done- THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU (see the <a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/credits">Credits</a> section in the new website).</p>
<p>Continue to monitor and review to make sure all future materials meet the guidelines and criteria set to showcase this amazing chorus.</p>
<p>Now can someone please tell me how to say what I do in one sentence at a cocktail party so that people's eyes don't glaze over??</p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Brandhound" class="ztag" rel="tag">Brandhound</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/PME" class="ztag" rel="tag">PME</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Pacific%20Mozart%20Ensemble" class="ztag" rel="tag">Pacific Mozart Ensemble</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Swart%20Design" class="ztag" rel="tag">Swart Design</a></span> 
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</entry>
<entry>
   <title>In Search of Airness</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/09/in_search_of_airness.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.45</id>
   
   <published>2007-09-09T18:17:25Z</published>
   <updated>2007-09-10T06:28:52Z</updated>
   
   <summary> A few weeks ago, Kurt and I were headed for New York and the 2007 Air Guitar US National competition. We had booked our flights (his being paid for by the US Air Guitar organization…yes, this org. does exist)...</summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Summer Vacation" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
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<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349280310_c1ef50e053_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349280310_c1ef50e053_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1349280310_c1ef50e053_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1349280310_c1ef50e053_o.jpg" border="0" id="1349280310_c1ef50e053_o.jpg"/></a>A few weeks ago, Kurt and I were headed for New York and the 2007 Air Guitar US National competition. We had booked our flights (his being paid for by the <a href="http://usairguitar.com/home.html">US Air Guitar</a> organization…yes, this org. does exist) in early July after the friendly takeover of the San Jose Regional Air Guitar Championship by Shred Nugent a.k.a. Kurt Brown.</p>
<p>At the time of the booking, a red eye had seemed like a great idea. Arriving at the Oakland airport an hour and a half before our midnight flight, we were near panic. ATA computer systems were down, the line stretched nearly to the door and the check-in counter was hand-writing boarding passes at a painfully slow pace. After about 30 minutes, the line had not moved an inch. We had originally been scheduled to arrive in New York five hours prior to the competitors 'call' and now we feared the worst. After checking with every other airline for available/still scheduled flights to NY, to no avail, all we could do was wait. 45 minutes into it the systems were back up and the line began to move. Phew. The flight left only an hour delayed.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1348390715_5e07335c44_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1348390715_5e07335c44_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1348390715_5e07335c44_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1348390715_5e07335c44_o.jpg" border="0" id="1348390715_5e07335c44_o.jpg"/></a>We arrived at the official US National Air Guitar 2007 hotel (read: HoJo) in SoHo and were immediately nearly run over by Erin "McNallica" McNally - in full make up --rushing to get to the <a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2007/08/20/video-air-guitarists-wail-hendrix-boston-on-air-axes-and-explain-their-unique-lifestyles/">Rolling Stone</a> press conference that had been moved to an earlier time slot, unbeknownst to most participants. Ok, so Kurt missed that one, but we had reached our destination. "Skeety Jones &amp; the Skeety Jones Band" (one man) from Chicago and "The Shred" from DC were checking in at the same time, as were the parents of "Airisol" the current champ from the Twin Cities. The atmosphere was already full of chummy competitiveness. Clearly, everyone had studied their competition online.</p>
<p>Despite the increasing nervousness (that I felt…not so much Kurt), we managed to get lunch at the famous Katz' diner, only blocks away from our hotel. We were met by Kurt's parents, his 15-year old cousin, and some friends from the East Coast who had all come to cheer him on.</p>
<p>After lunch, we dropped Kurt off at the Fillmore (East) at New York's Union Square area. They were headed for another press conference. It went something like this:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>MSNBC: How did you spend your time training for the competition?<br/>Ricky Stinkfingers (SF Champ): By drinking as much as possible, I've been trying to build up my tolerance.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Outside the Fillmore, a line was already forming to the sold out show. It took me only minutes to rid myself of the two extra tickets we had ended up with.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349281956_7d0df42efc_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349281956_7d0df42efc_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1349281956_7d0df42efc_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1349281956_7d0df42efc_o.jpg" border="0" id="1349281956_7d0df42efc_o.jpg"/></a>The warm up act (with actual instruments and Yay! to earplugs) was a somewhat questionable Jersey based band called 'Satanicide". My favorite thing about them was their back up 'dancer', a last minute addition to the evening's performance. I've never seen a man dancing in a bikini with such conviction. It took a few minutes for the stage hands to take down the set, and to clear the stage for the main performers of the night…and finally the 'air' was on.</p>
<p>The emcee (the only professional US Air Guitarist) Björn Türogue, introduced the judges (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Jones_(actor)">Jason Jones</a> of <a href="http://www.comedycentral.com/shows/the_daily_show/index.jhtml">The Daily Show</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rachel_Dratch">Rachel Dratch</a> of <a href="http://www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/">Saturday Night Live</a>, best-selling author <a href="http://www.gladwell.com/">Malcolm Gladwell</a> and <a href="http://www.aclu.org/">ACLU</a> lawyer Ben Wizner) and gave the packed hall a run down of the rules &amp; criteria:</p>
<p>"The contestants participate in two rounds: in the first, each competitor performs with a 60 second edit of a song of their own choosing, in the second, the top five competitors from round one compete by performing with a surprise song. In each round the contestants are judged on technical merit, stage presence and the somewhat obscure quality of "airness":<br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Airness = the extent to which the performance transcends the imitation of the real art form and becomes an art form in and of itself.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Also, as you may have noticed, one of the key elements to air guitar greatness is the stage name. It definitely is more than just a name, it becomes their alter-ego.</p>
<p>There are other, un-official, guidelines to great air guitar-ing, as well. One of the most revered to seems to be the "three-beer-rule". Apparently, any deviation from it and you may find yourself in trouble on stage.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349282554_54494e129c_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349282554_54494e129c_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1349282554_54494e129c_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1349282554_54494e129c_o.jpg" border="0" id="1349282554_54494e129c_o.jpg"/></a>The main prize, and Kurt's motivation for participation: a free trip to Oulu, Finland (my hometown) to represent the U.S. at the <a href="http://www.airguitarworldchampionships.com/home.html">Air Guitar World Championships</a>. Since 1996, it has been a yearly event in Oulu. It began as a peace movement with the idea "if you are playing air guitar, you cannot hold a gun in your hands at the same time." Today, representatives from 17 countries come to Oulu in the hopes of bringing home the trophy - an actual electric guitar called the "<a href="http://www.fgwguitars.com/g_ff_custom.html">Flying Finn</a>", hand-made by a Finnish guitar maker Matti Nevalainen.</p>
<p>The first round was filled with great performances by all; stage dives, mid-performance costume changes, back flips, hand stands and flying liquids of all kinds. My main goal was not to get the camera drenched, being at the front of the stage I had given up on the rest.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1348390267_348881da7a_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1348390267_348881da7a_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1348390267_348881da7a_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1348390267_348881da7a_o.jpg" border="0" id="1348390267_348881da7a_o.jpg"/></a>In an air guitar competition, the performance order is everything. Going first is a kiss of death, or so I'm told. Kurt got #4 in the hat draw, which wasn't terrible, but could've been better. He had edited Ozzy Ozbourne's latest hit "I Don't Wanna Stop" to the required 60 seconds, gave it his all, but that night and for that panel of judges, it just wasn't enough of the right kind of 'airness'. His response to the 'judging' was in a form of spidey boxers…a kinder version of the reactions that the judges drew from many of the competitors. There seems to prevail a certain kind of love-hate relationship that air guitar competitors &amp; judges, and for that matter, audience &amp; judges have…and cherish. It really is not for the faint of heart.</p>
<p><br/>After a fierce first round, five competitors proceeded to the second round, to improvise to Darkness' "Get Your Hands off My Woman." The five finalists were:<br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Andrew " William Ocean " Litz (NY)<br/>Fatima "Rockness Monster" Hoang (LA)<br/>Craig "Hot Lixx Hulahan" Billmeier (Defending US Champ, from Alameda )<br/>Randy "Big Rig" Layman (Houston)<br/>Erin "McNallica" McNally (Boston )<br/></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Some crushed beer cans and many stage "surfings" later, William Ocean emerged as the victor of this year's US Nationals. His fans, the 'Wave Riders', filled the room with noise…and more flying liquids. By this time I was wishing I'd brought a rain coat…uhm…and some boots.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349287380_72d54c40b2_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1349287380_72d54c40b2_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="1349287380_72d54c40b2_o.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="1349287380_72d54c40b2_o.jpg" border="0" id="1349287380_72d54c40b2_o.jpg"/></a>As is the tradition, anyone in the audience hoping to get a taste of 'airness' was invited to join the competitors on stage for the final number of the official part of the evening to play along to 'Freebird'. To see it makes one wonder about the load carrying capacity of these stages, and hope for the best.</p>
<p>But the night was not even close to being over. The entire entourage (or at least 200 of the main enthusiasts) packed a nearby Beauty Bar for an after party that lasted till the wee hours of the morning. Of course, many more air performances were seen throughout the night.</p>
<p>-Mari Marjamaa</p>
<p>Mari's Pics from the event: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/42748771@N00/sets/72157601928217039/show/">Shred Nugent Slide Show</a><br/>Here's a sample of Kurt's performance:<br/><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/6I7PGCezA9I"/>
<param name="wmode" value="transparent"/>
<embed height="350" width="425" wmode="transparent" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/6I7PGCezA9I"/></object></p>
<p><br/>Other Links:<br/>MSNBC Zeitgeist article: <a href="http://zeitgeist.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/08/20/324009.aspx">Greatness Stinks at the Air Guitar Championships</a><br/>Rolling Stone article: <a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/rockdaily/index.php/2007/08/20/video-air-guitarists-wail-hendrix-boston-on-air-axes-and-explain-their-unique-lifestyles/">Air Guitarists Wail...</a><br/><a href="http://www.airguitarnation.com/new/">US Air Guitar (Movie)</a><br/><a href="http://www.airguitarworldchampionships.com/home.html">World Championships, Oulu Finland<br/></a><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_guitar">History of Air Guitar</a><br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="zoundry_bw_tags">
  <!-- Tag links generated by Zoundry Blog Writer. Do not manually edit. http://www.zoundry.com -->
  <span class="ztags"><span class="ztagspace">Technorati</span> : <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Air%20Guitar" class="ztag" rel="tag">Air Guitar</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Fillmore%20East" class="ztag" rel="tag">Fillmore East</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/MSNBC" class="ztag" rel="tag">MSNBC</a>, <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/Rolling%20Stone" class="ztag" rel="tag">Rolling Stone</a></span> 
</p>]]>
      
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</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Becca n Kymry&apos;s Summer Vaca</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/2007/08/becca_n_kymrys_summer_vaca.html" />
   <id>tag:www.pacificmozart.org,2007:/blog//1.44</id>
   
   <published>2007-08-14T08:06:11Z</published>
   <updated>2007-08-14T19:40:37Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ So what did Kymry &amp; Becca do on their summer vacation? In July Kymry had the good fortune to accompany two choirs on back-to-back tours in Europe, and Becca came along for the journey. The Acalanes High School Chamber...]]></summary>
   <author>
      <name>Eric Freeman</name>
      
   </author>
         <category term="Summer Vacation" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
   <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/">
      <![CDATA[
<p>So what did Kymry &amp; Becca do on their summer vacation? In July Kymry had the good fortune to accompany two choirs on back-to-back tours in Europe, and Becca came along for the journey. The Acalanes High School Chamber Singers performed in Lucerne and Paris, while WomenSing participated in a choral competition near Barcelona.</p>
<p><strong>LUCERNE</strong><br/><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/becca_and_Urs.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/becca_and_Urs_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="becca and Urs.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="becca and Urs.jpg" border="0" id="becca_and_Urs.jpg"/></a>Upon arrival in Switzerland we were treated to a welcome dinner, which included such traditional Swiss entertainments as polkas &amp; waltzes on accordion, yodeling, and a big burly Alpine horn player named Urs. The Alpine horn is about 20 feet long, sort of a Swiss didgeridoo. Urs invited a parade of choristers onstage to play it, and Becca gave it her best toot. Apparently trombone embouchure is very useful in getting good long tones on the Alpine horn. Following this demonstration there was an archery contest, where would-be William Tells from the audience shot an apple-shaped plywood target with a crossbow. (A real apple atop the head of a lad would have been more true to the legend, but much more of a mess - one supposes there were no apples or young boys to spare that evening.)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/lucerne_and_lake.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/lucerne_and_lake_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="lucerne and lake.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="lucerne and lake.jpg" border="0" id="lucerne_and_lake.jpg"/></a>While the kids were rehearsing for the final concert, we spent the afternoon touring around Lake Lucerne on the local ferry system. Here the true beauty of central Switzerland came to light. We saw small lakeside villages, chalets, waterfalls, and always looming above, the magnificent Alps. Imagine touring Tahoe without the south shore casinos and you get the idea.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/KKL.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/KKL_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="KKL.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="KKL.jpg" border="0" id="KKL.jpg"/></a>A gregarious fellow from Kansas City named Eph Ely directed the final concert of the youth choral festival in Lucerne. His musical selections were a bit questionable, especially "Gospel America," a medley of My Country 'Tis of Thee, America the Beautiful, and the Battle Hymn of the Republic, all in a 12/8 gospel shuffle feel. But the kids certainly had fun singing, and you couldn't beat the beautiful KKL concert hall and the very fine local orchestra accompanying the massed choir. We were swept away by a particularly cheesy number called "The Awakening", by Joseph Martin - as interpreted by 300 voices, full brass, thundering timpani and cymbal crashes, it was wonderfully bombastic, like some latter-day Olympic fanfare. Kymry only wished he'd had a chance to play the Steinway piano onstage. It was strange to sit in the audience for this concert to be sure, but Becca had an even more surreal experience this entire trip as a singer traveling for three weeks with two choirs and not singing a note on stage.</p>
<p><strong>PARIS</strong><br/><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/patrick.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/patrick_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Patrick Serenades the Tour Bus" height="150" width="200" alt="Patrick Serenades the Tour Bus" border="0" id="patrick.jpg"/></a>So with Lucerne wrapped up, we piled in the tour bus and drove to Paris. Our tour guide Patrick was a delight. He was witty, bright, and would spontaneously burst into song on the bus, serenading us on the P.A. with French songs and '80s new wave classics. But he was also constantly reading a volume of Rudolf Steiner philosophy - perhaps just to give him the appearance of not being a total hedonistic party animal. (It didn't seem to fool our teenage sopranos, who swooned over him like he was made of chloroform.) His age and origins remained obscure, but we learned a couple of things. Supposedly his home is Las Vegas, but as he makes his living as a tour guide for various performing arts groups, he's constantly on the road, keeps apartments in Atlanta and Brussels, and a Swiss bank account. Sounds like a pretty good life.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1003876685_d2f74ecd0c_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1003876685_d2f74ecd0c_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 150px; HEIGHT: 199px" title="Kymry at the Organ" height="199" width="150" alt="Kymry at the Organ" border="0" id="1003876685_d2f74ecd0c_o.jpg"/></a>In Paris we performed at three incredible cathedrals. The first was a mass at Basilique Sainte Clotilde, near Blvd. Saint-Germain. It's most famous for having the organ that Cesar Franck inaugurated and performed on for over thirty years. Following his tenure, Gabriel Pierne and a number of other noted French organists have succeeded the post. The current organist played a very complex and demonically chromatic piece as the introit and recession for the mass. When Kymry asked the organist which piece he'd played, he shrugged and said, "I was improvising." We had assumed improvising on the pipe organ was a lost art, but certainly not in the hands of that guy. So when Kymry got the chance to play this beast, he couldn't pass it up, but was hardly qualified for the gig. "I'm a pianist, not an organist. I don't know how to work those buttons and stops, and I certainly can't play that huge pedalboard underneath with my feet. I got a bit of help from my demonic organ friend, but it was a bit like getting behind the wheel of a Ferrari and just driving to the corner grocery store. I never got past second gear, but it sure was fun."</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1004734564_c46c913262_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1004734564_c46c913262_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="Notre Dame" height="150" width="200" alt="Notre Dame" border="0" id="1004734564_c46c913262_o.jpg"/></a>Our next performance was at Notre Dame, surely a highlight of the trip. The choir rose to the occasion and even the crowd of tourists parading through the sanctuary quieted down for the hour and gave the kids a good round of applause. After singing corny massed-choir music in Lucerne with hundreds of teenagers, in Paris the Acalanes Chamber Singers finally had the opportunity to perform more subtle music on their own as a smaller 24-voice group. Their repertoire included Poulenc, Vittoria, Gabrieli, Duruflé, and a new arrangement of "Amazing Grace" by their conductor Bruce Lengacher. That evening we took a sunset boat cruise on the Seine, enjoying the gorgeous twilight and a couple of rainbows. We rounded off the night with an aerobic journey up the Eiffel Tower, climbing up nearly 700 steps to the second level.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1003876247_bac390408c_o.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/1003876247_bac390408c_o_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="The Choir" height="150" width="200" alt="The Choir" border="0" id="1003876247_bac390408c_o.jpg"/></a>The next day the choir took a trip to Versailles. We didn't have enough time to get inside the palace but we did explore the expansive gardens and grounds surrounding the buildings. Unfortunately the two of us spent a little more time wandering around than we should have, and we walked back to our meeting point only to find the tour bus pulling away. Luckily Becca managed to flag it down!! We went on to visit and perform at Chartres, the final concert of the tour for Acalanes. On the bus ride home, Patrick had people come up and sing karaoke into the bus mic. Becca sang "Case of You", and Lindsay, an Acalanes alum and Joni Mitchell fan, sang the second verse. The women's vocal octet at Acalanes has learned some of Solstice's repertoire, and Becca was excited to sing a couple songs with them on the ride back to the hotel.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/BKSeine.jpg"><img src="http://www.pacificmozart.org/blog/BKSeine_tn.jpg" style="DISPLAY: inline; FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 5px; WIDTH: 200px; HEIGHT: 150px" title="BKSeine.jpg" height="150" width="200" alt="BKSeine.jpg" border="0" id="BKSeine.jpg"/></a>Later that night we took some of the kids out to the Moulin Rouge cabaret. It was an incredibly cheesy floor show - <em>très fromageur, oui!</em> - with prerecorded music (canned can-cans?) and lip-syncing, but there was no denying the terrific feather-boa costumes (or lack thereof) nor the endless flow of champagne at our table. The next morning we groggily said our goodbyes to Bruce and the Acalanes kids and spent a few nights on our own in Paris. We rented an apartment in Montmartre, just upstairs from Picasso's first flat in Paris - fairly modest but with a million-dollar view - and enjoyed exploring the steep cobbl