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Hymnasium
You're not really fit until you're tuned up | |
There are many people who are not professional singers.
Among those many, there are still those of you who enjoy singing. But, unless
you have the time and opportunity to join a musical group, you may not get
the
chance to practice as you should.
(Bellowing in the car or in the shower, however
enjoyable, isn't proper
"practice".)
So - you get a membership at the hymnasium. Perhaps you already know
what
you need to work on: breath control, tone support, vowel coloration... or
perhaps
you're not sure, and would like some assistance in discovering how you're
doing
with respect to intonation, timbre, phrasing, or whatever.
The practice rooms start with the private booth. Soundproofed so your singing
doesn't interfere with others, you can adjust it to be sonically live (shower) or
dead (coat closet). Each booth is equipped with professional-grade
headphones
(please bring, or rent, suitable clean earcovers), and a good quality sound
playback and recording system. (Inside the headphones, you can have an
electronic acoustic profile - anything from 'pub' to 'Sydney Opera House'.) You
can get a good amount of feedback
(data,
not audio squeals) about your practice session from the built-in computer and
its
various
software packages.
If you bring a flash drive, you can jack it into the USB port to get a recording of
your session, along with your reports.
You can sing from memory or from music; acapella or accompanied, solo or
ensemble. You can provide your own recordings or MIDI files, or can borrow
from the extensive library. (To keep costs and copyright problems to a
minimum,
the library concentrates on public-domain music; much of which is from older
sources. Since this includes a large portion of sacred music... well, that's
where the name comes from.) (Don't feel limited, though - if you want
something raunchy, the baroque Italian madrigals, for instance, have you
covered.)
If you've brought your ensemble in vivo rather than recorded, there are larger
rooms with capacity for small groups. These also contain the same computer
audio equipment as the booths.
There are always a number of vocal coaches on hand, this being a prime
employer of music majors from the local uni.
So - come on in, make some sweet tunes, get your blood oxygen and
dopamine
levels up, stimulate some brain activity, and get your confidence to the point
you
don't have to be drunk to karaoke.
And you don't end up in a sweat, either.
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I love. Makes me want to burst out and sing an aria. Oh yeah.
I'd go. |
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Or there's the karaoke bar down the street... |
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OK, Ray, try this: go there and spend twenty minutes practicing the
mellisma lines from "Unto Us a Child is Born", from Handel's
"Messiah".
Let me know the feedback you get from the patrons. |
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[+] but I can't help but feel the employees, rather than being musicians, would have to be tone deaf. |
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//For Unto Us//
You could probably get a good bit of applause if you managed "Thus Saith The Lord" at full tilt. |
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Having a pro chamber choir knock out Bohemian Rhapsody at the local pub is generally worth about 2-3 drinks each. :D |
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I'm a bass, so mellisma is a rarity. And the feedback I got
from doing Handel's Messiah was quite good, although we
weren't at the karaoke bar at the time. |
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This sounds like the opposite of Sacred Harp singing. I'd love
to see some live and even possibly participate. |
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Perhaps 'Die Forelle' might suit your taste? |
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Catchy tune, a psalm on tap for any occasion, that. |
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No no no, TomP, not a trout. A bass. Largemouth variety...
You might have seen it attached to a board with the words
'Bigmouth Billy' below it. |
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Who's Forelle, and what have you got against her,
[Tom]? |
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