Many professional and
non-professional musicians find themselves charged with the job of
conducting their local church choir. It’s a fun job with its own unique
set of challenges—not the least of which is dealing with the typical mix
of trained and untrained singers in the choir. In this guide are some
useful tips for conducting—and getting the most from—your choir.
Use a Baton—or Not
The
first decision you have to make as a church choir conductor is whether
or not to us a baton. A surprisingly large number of choral conductors
do not, but there’s no hard and fast rule one way or another.
The
argument for using a baton is that it helps you better define the beat
than using bare-handed gestures. The argument against using a baton is
that it may make conducting too rigid and keep the vocal music from
flowing as it should.
In reality, however, a good conductor can
get the desired results with or without a baton. Using a baton doesn’t
necessarily translate into a more rigid or staccato performance, just as
not using one doesn’t necessarily result in sloppy beat patterns. It’s
all a matter of what works for you; use the baton if you like, or go
bare-handed if that’s more your style.
Use Proper Conducting Technique
Whether
you choose to use a baton or not, you do need to employ proper
conducting technique. That means using the right hand only to define the
beat, and not mirroring beat patterns with both hands—which is
something less experienced conductors tend to do by default.
It
also means conducting the beat, not the rhythms of a piece, which is
another novice mistake. It’s tempting to use your hands to emphasize the
dominant rhythms in a piece, but that will confuse the performers. They
depend on you to keep the straight beat, and that’s what you need to
do.
So train yourself to use your right hand (baton or not) to
conduct proper beat patterns. Not simplified beat patterns, where you
make a simple up-down motion, but the full beat patterns where every
downbeat in a measure has its own position on the horizontal plane in
front of you.
You then free up your left hand for more musical
gestures—conducting dynamics, cues, phrasing, and the like. If there
isn’t anything musically to indicate with your left hand, leave it
straight at your side; don’t let it get in the way.
Don’t Sing Along
What
you should avoid doing is singing along with the choir while you
conduct. Now, this might seem natural to you, especially if you’re a
former member of the choir. But when you sing along your conducting
suffers, since you’re not concentrating fully. In addition, you won’t be
able to hear how the choir is doing over the sound of your own voice.
Focus on the task at hand, which is conducting, and leave the singing to
the choir.
Choose the Right Repertoire for Your Singers
The
wrong choice of music is the downfall of many a church choir conductor.
Choose the right level of music for your voices and everything will
sound great; choose music that’s too advanced or an inappropriate style
and even a good choir will sound bad.
The challenge is dealing
with the mix of trained and untrained voices found in a the typical
church choir. You want to pick music that challenges the more talented
singers in the choir, while at the same time isn’t impossible to sing by
the lesser-trained members.
This means paying attention to your
choir’s vocal strengths and weaknesses. Church choirs are notoriously
weak in the men’s voices, for example, which means you shouldn’t choose
music that requires a powerful bass presence. The worst-sounding church
choirs are those where the choir director’s ambitions don’t fit the
choir’s abilities; the best are those where the music matches the
available talent.
When in doubt, know that simpler is better.
Avoid music with notes that are too high or too low. Be wary of
arrangements with lots of fast-moving notes, difficult syncopated
rhythms, or lines with too many wide skips. With new music being
performed every week or so, you simply don’t have time to tackle
overly-challenging pieces.
Work on the Blend
Because
you’re dealing with a mix of talent levels, some singers in your choir
will be stronger than others. This may make it difficult to achieve a
pleasing blend of voices. It’s the danger of individualism; strong
singers will stand out like a vocal sore thumb, and not blend in with
the rest of the choir. Blending gets easier the more singers you have,
but you may need to have an aside with any singer who’s just a little
too good for the overall ensemble—but not quite good enough to recognize
the blending issue.
You can also achieve a better blend by
stressing listening during rehearsals. Ask singers to listen closely to
others in their section and try to match the sound they hear. Encourage
uniform pronunciation of vowels and consonants, and work hard on group
phrasing. Then just work, work, work on blend and balance during the
rehearsals; good results take time.
Rehearsals Are Key
Rehearsals
are where you really make your mark with a church choir. Unfortunately,
the rehearsal schedule for a church choir can be challenging, since
you’re typically dealing with infrequent rehearsals after work during
the week.
Start each rehearsal with 15 minutes or so of basic
vocal exercises, to get the body and the singers’ voices and brains
ready for singing. You can then turn to the music of the week, and start
working on individual parts and sections as need be.
You’ll want
to spend an appropriate amount of time working on when your singers
should breathe during a piece. It’s all part of establishing the desired
phrasing; you want everyone (or at least everyone in a section) to
breathe at the same time, not wherever they fell like doing so. This is
definitely an issue to address during rehearsals.
Also important
is getting your choir to sing in tune. Intonation is a challenge even
for professional choirs; it’s a real bear when you’re dealing with the
part-time singers in your church choir. It pays to spend a decent amount
of rehearsal time working through intonation exercises.
Finally,
keep an eye on the energy level of your singers, especially during long
rehearsals. If the energy level starts to flag, have the choir stand up
and sing for a while—or, if they’ve been standing, have them sit down
and rest. And don’t forget to take a break or two, and have some fun. If
you can get the singers laughing, especially in the last half of the
rehearsal, it will help to energize them.
Armed with these tips, you will be able to get the most out of your church choir. Happy conducting!
So true
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