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Gis by Giselle Wyers, R & S Chair for Youth and Student Activities, WA ACDA You work at Michigan State University: Tell us a bit about the teaching you do, how long have been teaching there, etc? This is my fifth year at Michigan State University and I have a dual position in conducting and music education. I conduct the MSU Womens Chamber Ensemble, created when I came to MSU. I teach graduate and undergraduate conducting, choral pedagogy, and graduate coursework in music ed Are you still working with childrens choirs, as well? No, though we have an exceptional childrens choir in residence conducted by Kristin Zaryski. My son sings for her and it is breathtaking to witness one's own child come into their voice and sense of self. I still do a fair amount of children's honor choirs, most recently the ACDA Southern Division Children's Honor Choir and I've had a long and fruitful relationship with the Pacific International Children's Choir Festival as a regular conductor in that format. Do you have any special ties to the Puget Sound region- summer is pretty nice here weather wise What are you looking forward to about the summer session? My ties to the area are slim so I am very happy to be invited to beautiful Washington. I did do doctoral work at the same time as Marc Hafso ((WA ACDA President) and, in fact, our six year old daughter is named for one of his children. And, of course, I'm looking forward to seafood! What are some of the topics you plan to cover at the upcoming summer session in Tacoma? The summer session environment is so relaxing, isnt it? I enjoy presenting in this format when the sessions are small enough to feel more conversational than institutional. Jonathan (Reed) and I are doing several joint sessions, one on advancing vocalism in the male and female voice as well as a conducting masterclass. I will also take up the issue of imagination in teaching, how we can continue to grow our practice as conductor/teachers. Teachable moments are those fluid opportunities in rehearsal to set aside personal goals in order to listen, receive, and respond to singers in an authentic way. The conditions for teacha I'll work on this concept in one of the interest sessions. Basically, I maintain that rehearsal strategies are embedded right in the musical DNA of a composition and that what and how we choose to teach the ideas are in direct relationship to the experiences and needs of the singers with which we work. I talk about conducting/teaching as a rich form of improvisation. Improvisation is creative work of the mind and the richer the thinking and decision-making, the more spontaneous and joyful our work becomes. What is the one thing you think teachers should emphasize more when it comes to the question of empowering a student's full musical potential. Expect more, press less. How much is gesture a part of the picture for you, as you describe rehearsal strategies? Gesture is our most powerful teaching tool. It is astounding enough the difference in vocal sound that can be achieved by communicative gesture but even more so to realize that our gesture has an impact on the very self-identity of a choir. Issues of control (or release of control), trust, and motive are translated through our body work as conductors. Can you summarize a bit about your publication In High Voice? In High Voice is one of the series in the wider Boosey & Hawkes holdings developed by Doreen Rao. In High Voice targets developing and advanced womens choirs, distinguished by the quality of composition but also by the interaction with texts and ideas that reflect the complexity of women's experiences. What are some of the challenges and rewards that you have found from working with younger singers such as your work with the Glen Ellyn Children's Chorus? Working with children taught me both the craft of teaching and how to work at the most basic level to build vocalism. I believe those years with the Glen Ellyn Children's Chorus were my best education and like many teachers, feel badly for what I must have put them through as they taught me what was effective! If one can develop a beautiful instrument in a child, one can shape vocalism at any level. It's just the most pure experience! Describe your personal style of leading rehearsal and engaging singers, especially middle school and high school aged singers. From your experience what is it that students need the most right now? Musicianship? Heart, a sense of connection? Better repertoire? Great question. I like the word engage very much. It has more vitality than facilitate without projecting my personality on a choir. To engage is to set the conditions for success and that means understanding where singers are coming from (musically and personally) and shaping experiences that are relevant. Great repertoire, absolutely, they deserve it Musicianship, what a joy when they can take ownership of musical ideas. Heart and a sense of connection...why do we sing in the first place? We sing to feel the most alive, the most vibrant, the most spiritual, and the most complete. We don't sing to learn concepts for concepts sake, solfege for solfege sake, vowels for vowels sake, or even music for music's sake. We sing because to be expressive is at the core one of the essential experiences of the human condition. Thank you! I have had such wonderful mentors who continue to inspire me. I studied first with Hilary Apfelstadt, one of the few women working at that level at the time. I became deeply involved in Doreen Rao's Choral Music Experience Institute and found great synergy with other colleagues, particularly composers. I learned more than I can say from Dr. Charles Smith, then Director of Choral Programs at Michigan State University. Aside from his superb gesture, I learned to consider text much more deeply than I had before and it in turn transformed my ideas about musical phrasing. I spent seven wonderful years at University of Michigan where my colleague Jerry Blackstone inspired me daily and who actively mentored me into the ways of collegiate teaching. As for the present, my students, present and former, inspire me. It is a great privilege to watch a teacher take wings and fly. What composers, especially American composers, interest you? How do you sift through the chaff to find the good stuff? What recommendations do you have for teachers looking for affordable but high quality repertoire for their programs? A tough question, as I'm interested in so many musics. I love the music of Daniel Brewbaker, a composer who in my opinion is surprisingly unknown. The state of Minnesota seems to grow exceptional composers! The young crowd, Jocelyn Hagen, Abbie Betinis, Andrea Ramsey, among others will contribute new voices to the repertoire. At MSU, we have made the tough decision to require students to purchase their choral music as textbooks. We simply couldn't sustain the high cost of repertoire. The obvious disadvantage is that we are not building a choral library as we did in the past, but this kind of arrangement will no doubt be the wave of the future. We also use CPDL with regularity. |
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Building a "Soundtrack" for Life August, 2009 In the And yet when the school year ramps up again, I find myself anxious about whether the endless hours of "on time" with students will leave me invigorated or exhausted. This catch-22 is perhaps as much about human nature (always wanting what you don't have) as anything. But inside this is also what I consider to be a useful exercise- looking at how we can use music as a "soundtrack for life" in both the active, harvest phases (working with students, going to festivals and tours, etc) and the quieter "germination" phases (alone in the office, filing old papers, and playing through repertoire ideas on the piano). What makes a piece one that becomes part of a "soundtrack for life?" How can we help our students build connections to the music they sing so that it sustains them--both throughout the year, and eventually, outside in the "real" world as they pursue future paths? Can we help students connect with classical music at the same emotional intensity that they feel when they hear popular music? A couple of years ago I had the honor of working with a large number of choirs in Alaska during a three day festival held in Ketchikan for high school choirs, bands and orchestras. Part of my task was to offer workshops in areas that might enrich their education. After doing a number of sessions on vocal technique, Laban movement and small ensemble skills, I chose to deviate from the norm and offer a session called "How music has saved or changed your life." The room was packed. I began the session by sharing a true story from my past about how music sustained me through the darkest period of my life. Back when I was 26 years old and pursuing a masters degree at Westminster Choir College, my mother was diagnosed with one of the most malignant brain tumors out there- and I was told that she probably had less than a year to live. This shocking news was delivered to me one week before I was expected to conduct my graduate choral recital. Arrangements were made for me to fly home after her surgery, and the day after my recital. I spent that week preparing music, packing boxes, researching unconventional cancer remedies, and missing my mother terribly. But what sustained me through that week was the music itself. It is strange and serendipitous that I had chosen Corigliano's Fern Hill (a setting of a bittersweet poem written by Dylan Thomas about the fading of childhood, with the final lines of the poem "Time held me green and dying, though I sang in my chains like the sea") and Lauridsen's MidWinter Songs (the first lines of the Robert Graves poem read "Dying Sun, shine warm a little longer! My eye, dazzled with tears, shall dazzle yours, conjuring you to shine and not to move," and the final lines of the poem are, "How hard the year dies: no frost yet... Spare him a little longer, Crone, For his clean hands and love-submissive heart.") How I was able to conduct these texts is beyond me. Something about the process of creating music in the midst of grief, within a community of sympathetic fellow singers, was a tremendous gift and has always stayed with me. My mother died after 5 1/2 months. Each day after she died, I spent 4 hours playing piano as well as studying scores for my orals exam, and somehow, music pulled me through it all. When I shared my story with the high school students before me, the concept of music as a "soundtrack for life" began to resonate. I then asked them to write down anonymously their own stores of how music has saved, or changed, their lives. The stores were incredible. I had not anticipated the depth of sharing that might come from this simple exercise. There were stories of brothers in Iraq, stories of perseverance through poverty, stories of parental neglect, and how in each case, music saved them from despair. I also read stories of music's ability to transform students' moods and perceptions and bring joy and creativity to their lives, especially through the friendships and bonds they formed in choir. Many spoke of particular texts that shaped their year, or "signature pieces" that they will never forget performing. If you ever wonder, as you amp yourself up for another year of hard work and long hours, what the value of your work is, ask your students to write a "soundtrack for life" story for you. You may be surprised to learn that your teaching has "saved or changed" their lives, through your offerings of music, poetry with depth, community, and love in your classroom. --Giselle Wyers, R & S Chair for Youth and Student Activities
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College Scholarship Auditions: Tips from an Insider by Giselle Wyers, R&S Chair for Youth and Student
Activities |
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BEFORE YOU GO THE BIG DAY
THE NEGOTIATION Dr. Giselle Wyers is Assistant Professor of Choral Studies and Voice at University of Washington, where she where she conducts the University Chorale and teaches courses in voice, undergraduate choral conducting, graduate choral repertoire, and music methods. |
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