CC anyon hords SHOW TIME
Transcription
CC anyon hords SHOW TIME
BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! CC MONTROSE COLORADO Singing every Thursday at 7:00 PM, Community United Methodist Church of Olathe anyon hords Visit us at our official web site: http:/barbershopsingingmontrose.yolasite.com/ July 2013 Vol. 29 Number 7 SHOW TIME It was 7:00 pm, lights dimmed, our excellent emcee Jim Kerschner told a joke, and the curtains opened thanks to Marty Rathburn. Then, WOW, there were people, lots of people in the audience. We were happily surprised, based on the depressing Friday preshow ticket sales report from Rex, our money guy, and the doom and gloom predictions about a June performance. Based on the lagging pre-sales, and historical data, a decision was made in a fit of frugality to limit the number of expensive programs to 300 (costs about $1 each to print) rather than throw a couple of hundred in the trash. Guess what? We ran out of programs! The guys sang their hearts out for MaryAnn and music came together (words too) to provide a very entertaining first half for our audience. Three quartets, two from our chorus and one from DelRose chapter, gave a needed variety of performance. Tom Chamberlain, Show Chairman, did an excellent job of stage organization by moving backdrops and placing mics to provide the very best acoustics. We couldn’t have sounded better. The sound in the very back of the auditorium was simply perfect. Big thanks to the Pavilion sound guys for making it happen. The second half reinforced the decision to have the DelRose chapter perform with us, and to secure BLUE STEELE as our guest quartet. It was a knockyour-socks off evening, followed by a knock-your- socks off Afterglow. We have had many excellent guest quartets over the years but none are more entertaining and crowd engaging as BLUE STEELE, previously THE SUMMIT. This it the third time we have booked them and hopefully will not be the last. They are just great. Shawn Mondragon, the lead and really funny guy was either on a roll at the Afterglow or had made too many trips to the bar. His description of the quartet traveling the trio of passes between Durango and Montrose in the middle of the night kept the audience in stitches. Not only are they funny, they can SING. The Afterglow provided another surprise. Again we anticipated maybe 100 but at this point I don’t have a count. But I can tell you that we ran out of food and poor suffering Carol Morrell somehow obtained some more grub for the hungry. Most of you know there were some detail glitches in the Afterglow, caused mainly by the unexpected length of recovery by Larry W and required care-giving by his wife, Sally. Extra special kudos and deeply felt thank yous are extended to Carol, Larry Cooper, and Dennis Olmstead for picking up the ball and making it happen. Now, after a sigh of relief that it is over, it is time to start planning for 2014. Who will be the Chairman? Your chance for fame and ... well just fame. Maybe. Page 1 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS CANYON CHORDS is the official monthly publication of the Black Canyon Barbershop Chorus known as the Montrose, Colorado, chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Society. Opinions stated in this bulletin are not necessarily those of the Chapter, the Editor, or possibly even the stated author. 2013 CHAPTER OFFICERS (Term expires 12/31 in year shown after position) PRESIDENT (2013) ! Larry Wilkinson! EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT ! John Taylor SECRETARY (2014) ! Chuck Frush! TREASURER (2014) ! Rex Pierson! PROGRAM VP (2013) ! Larry Cooper MEMBERSHIP VP (2014) ! Del Dyck PUBLIC RELATIONS VP (2013) ! Dennis Olmstead! MUSIC VP (2013) ! David Stannard! COMMUNICATIONS VP (???) ! Bill Sutton! MEMBERS-AT-LARGE (1 year terms) ! Bob Brethouwer ! ! Tim Davis ! John Reick ! John Taylor MUSICAL DIRECTOR: ! MaryAnn Rathburn ! Tom Chamberlain, Emeritus ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER ! Carol Morrell SERGEANT AT ARMS ! Bob Brethouwer SUNSHINE GUY (appointed) ! Rex Pierson CHAPTER HISTORIAN (appointed) ! Tom Chamberlain What ever happened to our desires for a turn-key afterglow when no members would have to physically help with set up, serve, and clean up? It happened at the Bridges. Will it happen at the Pavilion? www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADO Splinters from the Board Newly appointed Executive Vice President John Taylor chaired the meeting this month as we anticipate the fully recovery of President Larry Wilkinson. Darn good job as John dealt with a host of things that needed to be discussed and decided. Enough AfterGlow detail glitches to choke a baritone were discussed in order to assure they won’t happen again next year. Most of them can be attributed to the unexpected health problems of our President and extra care giving burdens imposed on his wife Sally. There are not enough thanks to heap on Carol, Larry C, potentially Dennis, and Sally W for turning a . cess suc big a disastrous afterglow into Another glitch that should never happen was a confusing and poorly written contract with Blue Steele that led to last minute and unapproved fee increases to the quartet and decrease of chapter profit. After the afterglow is not the perfect time to force the Treasurer to negotiate the previously accepted contract and payment. The meeting started with Treasurer Rex trying to untangle and make sense of three separate accounting nightmares which contribute to the final show numbers. These are: show expense/income; afterglow expense/income; and supporter donations/ expense. Some traction was gained to seriously consider to lump the show and afterglow into one event and revise supporter donations to an annual task. This would made accountability much simpler and make Rex’s job much easier. Special KUDOs were given to the excellent help and work from the Pavilion sound guy. His expertise and wiling to work with Tom helped us sound better than we deserve. He will receive a thank-you card and gift card from the chapter. how it Discussions about the reestablished registration fee for Silverton and should be handled ended with a Motion to poll all members about their on commitment to Silverton, and whether/if the $15 fee will have any effect will r Coope VP m their attendance. Post poll, Exec. VP Taylor and Progra or will make a determination if registration fees will be paid by the chapter you be a personal expense. So, be prepared to let John and Larry know how feel. Rex has sent ‘thank you’ cards to It goes without saying that we missed the all of our wonderful supporters. wise council of President Larry and especially the wonderful brownies from The date for 2014 show was Sally. discussed but no decision can be Next board meeting July 9 made until availability of dates is obtained from the at Timberline Bank Pavilion. Dennis has agreed to find out and brief us at the next meeting. Page 2 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADO The Chorus owes a very special THANK YOU to Del and Joni Dyck for the wonderful and plentiful AND HEALTHY snacks they provide for our enjoyment every week. Without them our breaks would be just a boring way to spend 15 minutes. THANK YOU JONI AND DEL 4 old guys on a bench Dennis Olmstead! Don Barnett! Larry Wilkinson! Del Dyck! June 19 June 23 June 28 July 8 We don’t stop singing because we get old, we get old because we stop singing. Chapter Quartets FOURMATA Contact: Bill Sutton 874-9280 Warming up at Ridgway Women will never be equal to men until they can walk down the street with a bald head and a beer gut, and still think they are sexy. Page 3 of 8 pages ROCKY ROAD Contact: Vern Dockter 970 -210 - 1793 n e n , s e e e and deep within my breast I thrill to see Old Glory paint the breeze. BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADO ill, I w 's a e r he t it. e n r i “We can’t convince him he doesn’t look e e Sam.” Wh t tolikebUncle wan HOW TO PRESERVE YOUR VOICE FOR YOUR SENIOR YEARS by Jim DeBusman from Harmony Local and lifted from the May issue of The Voice of Rushmore There are many senior singers out there asking some very important questions such as; “I recently noted my 72nd birthday and am finding in the past few years that both my lung capacity and also my range (esp. low notes) are not what they used to be. Are there things I should know to help me combat the inevitable con- sequences of aging?” Some of the answers to these questions are that the older we get, the more important it is to remember that we must spend more time on practicing our breathing every day. Any deep breathing exercises like warm air, hissing, nasal or back breathing exercises will do the trick. We must also keep physically active. Go swimming, ride a bike, play golf, go bowling, walk, but do some kind of physical activity every day. As your body matures, you just can’t just sit on your favorite chair and watch TV. Do something that stimulates your muscles and your mind. Here are some reasons why you need to do this. It is understood that muscles become tired as you become older. This causes an increasing stiffness of the vocal fold tissue. You need to keep the vocal muscle as flexible as possible and that is why singing a little bit everyday will make a difference as you grow older. Make certain you sing correctly. As you grow older, your voice will not be as strong as it once was and you probably won’t have the range you once had, but you still can sing in good quality if you take good care of your vocal instrument. Don’t expect to sing only once a week and be the quality singer you once were. Singing is the stuff that keeps us full of life for a long time. It has the power to heal us and stimulate our minds and bodies. Singing will continue to build your skills and the discipline in your life as long as you wish it too. When you perform in your chorus and/or quartet, it requires fantastic coordination of your body and mind. Continuing to sing throughout your life, all your life, will keep you younger and healthier longer than you could have ever hoped for. Page 4 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADO Fourmata singing Little Girl Some are singing, some are texting Rocky Road singing Moonlight Bay Final warm-up before the Show Hi Dennis, ote n ice om n y er nis fr v A n De teele o t eS Blu If you could send us a program, that would be awesome. We really enjoyed being with you guys and sharing such a wonderful show. Your entire group was so congenial and appreciative! We have done a lot of shows and this was among the top of the most fun groups to sing for and with. Thanks again, and we'll see you guys in Cheyenne. Keep us on your list for somewhere down the road and we'll be back - hopefully with our new CD. We could easily get in the habit of coming to Montrose. You all are the poster children for the joy of Barbershop. Thanks again, and keep up the great work in encouraging Barbershopping and keeping it alive and well. Tim Page 5 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADO From the prevents electricity leaks, much like the insulation on a copper wire does, and so the more myelin there is around a neuron, the faster and more efficiently that neuron will fire. The Director’s Turf by Drew Wheaton How do you practice? Practicing is an important part of anything that we do in life. We learn how to do something and we practice it to get it better. When we’ve learned to do something correctly, we repeat the action numerous times to get it engrained in our brains. We all fundamentally understand this process. However, most of us do not really know how to practice to be as efficient as possible and achieve the most lasting results. To really understand that it is important to understand a little bit about how the brain works and, more specifically, learns and improves upon new knowledge and skills. The brain is made up of neurons, which are not connected to each other but are close enough that electricity can shoot from one to the next. Any time we make an action or a thought, many of those neurons fire. Each time a neuron has an electrical signal pass through it, the brain creates a layer of myelin around it. That layer acts as insulation, much like the insulation on a copper wire. The myelin Knowing that, it is understandable that as we repeat correct actions they become easier to do correctly and more quickly each time. However, negative behavior is equally engrained into us if it is repeated endlessly. Here is the rub: If, during practice, a mistake is made but recognized by the individual and corrected the brain reinforces the positive behavior AND becomes better at preventing the negative one. In “The Talent Code,” Daniel Coyle refers to this kind of practice as “deep practice.” It is very focused and diligent practice. It is not simply repetition for repetition’s sake. It is so much more than that. Here is an example of applying it to practicing your part in a barbershop song. Let’s assume that you have a new song in front of you. You listen to it two or three times, getting an overall idea of the melody, of the form (for example, Verse – Chorus – Chorus – Tag) and now you’re ready to start learning your part. You Page 6 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! listen to the first four measures of the song. AND YOU STOP. You listen to the first four measures again, staring intently at the music. AND YOU STOP. You focus on each interval as you listen to the first four measures one more time. AND YOU STOP. You then sing the first three notes, but you got the third note wrong, but you keep on singing. WRONG! YOU STOP. You sing the first three notes, til they are right. You sing the first six notes, and make a mistake, AND YOU STOP. Do you go back to the beginning? No, you sing the fifth and sixth note back and forth, getting that interval right, then the fourth, fifth and sixth. THEN you start back at the beginning. But wait, you just missed that pesky third note again. STOP. Fix it. Start again. Move forward. Don’t just make mistakes and move on. Make mistakes and fix them. Every time you attempt something, miss it, fix it, attempt it again and get it right, you build a complex matrix of MONTROSE COLORADO myelinated neurons that lead you to further success later. Sounds long? Grueling? It is. And it will save you even longer hours of fixing any of the mistakes you teach yourself by not doing it right in the first place. So here is my plea to the members of this chorus, and anyone else trying to learn new music. Take the time to sit down and focus intently on the music and only the music. Do not try to learn the music while driving your car when you are distracted and incapable of analyzing your own performance. Ten minutes of focused deep practice will far outperform an hour of distracted repetition, every time. We are all capable of doing great things, and as a chorus even more so, but we all need to do our part to focus on doing it right, every time. This is how I practice. This is how I rehearse. It will get us where we want to be. A married man should forget his mistakes. There's no use in two people remembering the same thing! Page 7 of 8 pages BLACK CANYON BARBERSHOP CHORUS gettin these www.blackcanyonchorus.org ! MONTROSE COLORADOin ad What a challenge! He knew what he wanted to have in mem his software system, but had no idea of how to develop a outnu program allowing him to do what he wanted to do. So, if Stamp tinue you can believe this, he worked with Apple to develop a I here new program. They suggested he buy a software program Prisc called "Numbers," and told them they would help him modchoru ify it to create a software system that would allow Lee to good do what he wanted to do. So he worked with the Apple tinue program people and ended up with a software program audie that would allow him to develop a system that he exto do plained to us on the Board last week. churc Lee had to actually develop a Quicken program for his new MAC. Teach the Children to Sing If any of you might be interested in learning what he did, just call him. He loved doing it, and continues to imMountain Talk Page 13 Julyprove 2012 it, and LOVES to talk about it. And not because he 1943 Spring Drive CHAPTER MISSION STATEMENT wants to brag about it, he was just very excited about what "Flourishing and growing as individuals, as a Delta, CO 81416 he was exactly able to do, on his own. He will be able to April 26-27 chorus, and as a chapter by singing in an separate revenues and expenses Chapter Quartets RMD NEWS Rocky Mountain Harmony College REQUESTED (T,RETURN L, Br, Bs) atmosphere of musical excellence and by for all of our paid activities, annual SPRING CONVENTION For Every Member Int’l Quartet Prelims shows, Harmony Showcases promoting harmony in our lives, our Fastlane September 28-29 Red Lion Inn (Stapleton) (with Denver Mile High) Singing Valentines, Elk programs, relationships, and our community." FALL CONVENTION Denver, Colorado Paul Dover 303 471-2225 etc, and do the same with all of Albuquerque spebsqsa@comcast.net activities, our Doyle Cline, Paulour Dover “overhead” For those of us who do not live in the GrayCOMPLIMENTARY Jackson, Gian Porro CHORDS Rocky Mountain Harmony College will beautifulTHE state CANYON of New Mexico, I strongly chapter share of yearly BHS dues, NOT be in Estes Park in February 2013. suggest that you EDITOR/PUBLISHER bring your wife and visit BULLETIN Grace Notes director It will be held in conjunction with the Old Town Albuquerque, and Santa Fe as COPYfees, coffee revenues, Jerry Hooper 303 278-1762 Spring Convention in April. Bi!if Sutton well you have the time (spend an extra church rental expenses, etc. JerMarHooper@aol.com day or two if you can). 1943 Spring Drive We’ll crown a new District Quartet Delta CO Champion, our81416 choruses will compete for the opportunity to874-9280 represent the RMD in Phone/FAX Toronto, and the convention will be full of fun and educational opportunities to sing e-mail: wi!iesut@aol.com throughout the weekend. Registration forms are on the District website <www.RMDsing.org> as well as links to the headquarters hotel lodging reservation process and Kiva Auditorium information. As a gentle reminder, the RMD has negotiated the best room rate possible for a block of hotel sleeping rooms, and when you use these rooms, our Association of Chapters benefits with low-cost or no-cost space for chorus rehearsal ballrooms, classrooms, and meeting room space, etc. Please do not think of lodging outside of the RMD room block. Doing so might save you $5 - $10 per night, and then costs the District hundred of dollars in rental of meeting room space for our events. That’s YOUR District dollars being wasted unnecessarily. Thanks for lodging together as a District family (where you can enjoy the fellowship), and saving ourselves a boatload of money. With the retirement of Dr. Dan Clark, RMD BOTY, last year, Jeff Click has returned to the office of Music and Performance VP for the RMD, and is planning another outstanding Rocky Mountain Harmony College. It will be full of the classes and coaching we have come to expect with the intensive learning experience of Rocky Mountain Harmony College, and will have the additional appeal of a high powered Saturday night show with the International Quartet Prelim qualifiers added to the performance lineup. EVERYONE will want to attend this show of champions! SUMMER FESTIVALS The RMD has three fabulous festivals every summer, and every barbershopper should get to at least one of them. July 20-21 Silverton www.barbershopsingingmontrose.yolasite.com Aug 17-18 Harmony Happening in the Hills at Mt. Rushmore www.shrineofdemocracychorus.org Sunday, Aug 26 Boulder Chautauqua www.harmonize.com/timberliners Page 8 of 8 pages tende get th A Boar chap find w Del Miller, Joe Gibson Bob Dickman, Jerry Hooper Ignition! (with Denver Mile High) Curtis Terry 303 364-5800 curlymt@comcast.net Dan Testa, Curtis Terry Ryan Wilson, Denny Malone Rocky Mountain Magic Dick Cable 303 973-9217 dac2934@gmail.com Jim Darling, Doug Kulesa, Nelson McNulty, Ralph Fennell, Dick Cable Joyful Noise Tony Pranaitis 303 233-6234 TonyChiro@juno.com Al and Bunny Klinger Tony and Nancy Pranaitis UltraSoniX Damian Berger 720 962-6527 damian@e-oasis.com Dave Myers, Ted Cluett Tony Pranaitis, Damian Berger Mountain Talk Page 5