I am ready to roll up my sleeves and jump in. I have a good number of choir members in their seats, and I start with the first number. It is like no one has seen this music before. Yikes! No matter, I go over marks for breaths and pronunciation issues and talk the piece through. Then we sing. It is better after the talk through. I do the same for the next piece. It takes forever to mark all the places. We sing. It is better.
One of the sopranos, looking at the clock behind me, says with concern "At this rate we will be here until midnight." I realize she is right. No more talking through an entire piece. It is too complicated to make sure everyone is on the same page. I have no idea who was here for what rehearsals and who has marked what piece. I keep plugging away, pushing us to fix the broken places and get things under our belts. People who were here for marking try to let their neighbors know about any changes. That helps. This is way late in the game for us to be still struggling with entrances and pitches. Still, I have seen this choir pull things out of the fire before.
I think back. Have I provided enough time to learn this music? It is the same amount that I allotted last year, but this is a new work. Perhaps I should have done more rehearsing since the arrangements are new even though many of the songs are familiar hymns. And some of my key players were not able to make all the rehearsals. I cannot go back and give them more time. I know that often, having spent lots of time on music, letting it gel overnight brings the performance new life. Ultimately, the results rest in God's hands. We have done all we can.
My main prayer is that the people who come will be drawn closer to God through remembering Christ's passion. And if our music makes that possible, I am grateful. Tonight, I work through my score. I must have a game plan in place for tomorrow. I mark the places where we had trouble today, and list them by page and measure number to review before service tomorrow. I have 30 minutes to run the issues of 9 different songs. That is only about 3 minutes per song. I will have to be totally organized and ready. Plus I need to start and end each song so we remember the flow.
Yes, I mark for each song first 2 measures, some difficult passage, and last few measures. If I am focused, we can do it, making sure everyone remembers what we worked on today. Then, it will be what it will be.
One of the sopranos, looking at the clock behind me, says with concern "At this rate we will be here until midnight." I realize she is right. No more talking through an entire piece. It is too complicated to make sure everyone is on the same page. I have no idea who was here for what rehearsals and who has marked what piece. I keep plugging away, pushing us to fix the broken places and get things under our belts. People who were here for marking try to let their neighbors know about any changes. That helps. This is way late in the game for us to be still struggling with entrances and pitches. Still, I have seen this choir pull things out of the fire before.
I think back. Have I provided enough time to learn this music? It is the same amount that I allotted last year, but this is a new work. Perhaps I should have done more rehearsing since the arrangements are new even though many of the songs are familiar hymns. And some of my key players were not able to make all the rehearsals. I cannot go back and give them more time. I know that often, having spent lots of time on music, letting it gel overnight brings the performance new life. Ultimately, the results rest in God's hands. We have done all we can.
My main prayer is that the people who come will be drawn closer to God through remembering Christ's passion. And if our music makes that possible, I am grateful. Tonight, I work through my score. I must have a game plan in place for tomorrow. I mark the places where we had trouble today, and list them by page and measure number to review before service tomorrow. I have 30 minutes to run the issues of 9 different songs. That is only about 3 minutes per song. I will have to be totally organized and ready. Plus I need to start and end each song so we remember the flow.
Yes, I mark for each song first 2 measures, some difficult passage, and last few measures. If I am focused, we can do it, making sure everyone remembers what we worked on today. Then, it will be what it will be.