22 June, 2011

Melbourne Festival of Choirs, 2011

The Festival of Choirs was held over Queens Birthday weekend again this year, and Two Bays Choir was twenty-five strong this time.  The Festival is the brain child of Jonathon Welch and The Choir which he leads was the 'Choir in Residence'.

We stayed in various hotels near Federation Square, since this was the hub of the organisation for the Festival. Of course, it's also the centre for lots of community activities which were a bonus for us as we went between venues.

On Friday and Saturday nights, Jonathon Welch and members of The Choir lead songs around the Campfire which burned on a bed of red sand for the entire weekend at Fed Square as part of the Light in Winter Festival. That was a great start to the proceedings and afterwards, some went on to dinner, others retired to modest but companionable take-home meals and an early night.

Each morning for the three days (Saturday to Monday), there were three workshops in which we worked with three different conductors to learn songs for the massed choirs concert in the Edge on Monday afternoon. Clearly, the magic number is three.


A workshop with George Torbay

Lunches were our own choice and that was easy with so many places nearby at Fed Square, Southbank and the Gallery. One little group chose to eat at the National Gallery cafe with the Exhibition of Choirs to follow nearby in the Great Hall.

A few of us had lunch at the NGV Cafe

What a lovely experience, singing in the Great Hall beneath that ceiling of beautiful colours. There were Master Classes, another Campfire Singalong, and then a special performance of "Moon" for Festival participants. "Moon" was written and conducted by Gordon Hamilton, and performed by The Australian Voices who are so talented and skilled in their performance of this extraordinary and complex work. The public performance followed in the evening.

Master Classes cover particular topics and were conducted by some of the special people present - Jonathon Welch, George Torbay, Gordon Hamilton, and Lucinda Sharp.

Master Class in the Elizabeth Murdoch Hall with Lucinda and Jonathon.

Later we were in a concert at the Recital Centre Elizabeth Murdoch Hall which was quite splendiferous!! We could have whispered the songs and still been heard, such are the acoustic qualities of this fascinating performance space. It was very exciting to be back stage, and all our rehearsals at home in the Senior Cits Club paid handsomely for entry, positioning and exit.

Back stage, we watched the following acts on CCTV

Jonathon and George catch up over a cuppa at the Recital Centre

A little glass of champagne was pleasant at interval, and then the concert continued. A group went to dinner at Bok Choi that evening - great service, wonderful food, good company.


At Bok Choi, Fed Square - cop that pork bun!
On Monday, the morning workshops put the finishing touches to our selection of songs for the afternoon performance. After lunch we gathered in the BMW Edge for rehearsal, getting the logistics right for our large numbers and freshly learned songs.


Jonathon Welch discusses the concert with David Kram.

Davis Kram conducted us in a mighty rendition of the Anvil Chorus complete with frying pans instead of anvils. We sang "Ice Blue" written by Gordon Hamilton for this occasion, and another song called "Lux Auruque" which is very beautiful, especially under the direction of George Torbay. This song is also remarkable in its conception; written by Eric Whittaker for a virtual choir. You can see and hear it on YouTube by following this link   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7o7BrlbaDs&feature=related  It's quite haunting, this 'Light and Gold' so do have a listen.


Massed choirs in rehearsal at the Edge.

Of course, there were a great many thank you speeches, and plenty of high jinks. A glorious moment was when the Sunbury Divas arranged all our conductors and Adam (our consummate accompanist) for a photo wearing their tiaras!


Adam, David, Jonathon, George, Gordon in borrowed finery

The Concert went well and we managed our workshop songs and completed the concert with one song from each of the participating choirs. It was indeed a Long Weekend, and very happy one.

Yours as ever,
Ros.


08 June, 2011

Rehearsing for Festival of Choirs

Queen's Birthday weekend is approaching and we had a final rehearsal for all the Two Bays people going to the Melbourne Festival of Choirs. It was great to have enough space at the Mornington Senior Citizens Club to move around. We have our positions clear, our order for getting onto the stage, and for leaving the stage which will be the opposite direction more than likely.


Rehearsing at home just before the Festival of Choirs.

Back stage, space is limited and noise travels so we are now well organised and looking forward to the event with Jonathon Welch and the many singers expected to participate.

06 June, 2011

Melbourne Millennium Chorus Rehearsals Start

Rehearsals have started for the 2011 Melbourne Millennium Chorus.

Oh wow! The choir will be 380 voices in a single concert at the Melbourne Town Hall. The energy is terrific with Stella Savy and Dani Fry at the helm. The preparation for this Winter event is fantastic.

"Freedom Road" is the name of this concert that follows the advent of slavery in the south of America, the development of gospel song, and the grievous trek to freedom for individual slaves. Gospel gives us insight into the misery, the faith that gave hope, and the battle for the abolition of slavery overall.

Dani and Stella and their team have prepared copious materials for all participants to be well prepared for this fantastic event. We have at our disposal MP3 files of all parts for all songs, music charts of all songs, lyrics, and twenty pages of historical notes which inform us of the background. The narration for the concert will also be taken from these notes.

Some of the Two Bays stalwarts outside Melbourne Girls College.
The rehearsals are held at Melbourne Girls College. There's a bit of a picnic atmosphere at the tea break - some queue for tea and cake whilst others bring food and hot drinks to share outside - if it's not raining. The rehearsals are a colourful mixture of fun and precision. Of course, this is a Victoria wide event so only half the chorus has been rehearsing in Melbourne. Other regional participants are practicing in Bairnsdale, Ballarat, Bendigo, and more.

If you're interested in getting tickets, we'd love to see you there. Here is the link to The Boite website where you can choose and purchase your seats. http://www.boite.com.au/bookings/

Do come. It'll be a rave.

A footnote from your Blog Master - it's so nice to return to 'normal' Melbourne weather when winter is Winter, but that's my view be it e'er so 'umble.