Archive for the 'Events' Category

Songtaneous – South Mpls, MN – 11/17/12

Posted by on Nov 17 2012 | Events

Event
Songtaneous
When
Saturday, November 17, 2012
2:00pm - 4:00 pm - $10 Sugg. Don.
Where
Private Venue
Other Info

Singing is an important expressive, spiritual and rejuvenating activity to which many of us lose access as we get busier in our lives. Songtaneous provides opportunities to explore singing with others and playing with the voice in a supportive environment. Songtaneous is not a rehearsal or a performance – it’s about being present and in community through song.

Aimed at music lovers who want a low-key and fun way to sing without joining a choir or committing to a lot of rehearsals, Songtaneous sessions are a fun, inventive and easy way to sing with others. The environment is a relaxed and playful.

Sarah M. Greer has been conducting Songtaneous sessions in the Twin Cities since 2006. Songtaneous sessions are community singing events. Based on Bobby McFerrin’s “Voicestra” and Sarah’s own work with vocal artist Rhiannon, we join together to create spontaneous songs. Sarah creates and assigns vocal parts to sections of a circle of singers.

Join us as we make music of the moment.

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Scat Basics Workshop – Minneapolis, MN – 10/29/12

Posted by on Oct 29 2012 | Events

Event
Scat Basics Workshop
When
Monday, October 29, 2012
6:30pm - 8:30 pm - All Ages
Where
Ivy Arts Building (map)
2637 27th Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55406
Other Info
This workshop is for singers who want to try scatting and improvising in songs and other standard forms.

We will work individually and in ensemble to help you discover your own personal language and tools for scatting, story-telling and lyric improvisation. With a few simple ideas and exercises, you can breathe new life into your songs (even if you've been singing them for years).

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Crossing the Great Divide

Posted by on Oct 04 2012 | Events, Songtaneous

illustration of the brain with grid and numbers behind left side and colored swooshes, music notes, instruments and staffs on the right

From a Mercedes Benz ad campaign, Illustrators: Gil Aviyam, Lena Guberman

When I first started studying spontaneous singing, it was a pretty right-brained affair. I was practicing with other singers and we were being … spontaenous.

It was great! There was all this fun — and freedom! — exploring melodies and language while playing with time and groove.

Sure, we sang exercises where I had to count measures or had a very specific singing job to accomplish, but — hey, it was improv — I broke the rules if I wanted.

After a couple of years, I felt like I was getting pretty good at this “improv” stuff. Except …

I could not find a way to bring my spontaneous singing into my other singing. And it felt like a right-brain, left-brain issue to me. (In hindsight, believing that there were two kinds of singing was likely a big part of my problem.)

Ask me to make up a melody or groove and I obliged happily. Any time I tried to scat or improvise in a song, however, I just … couldn’t.

I’d feel silly. Or I’d be singing somewhere where “messing up” would be inappropriate (and unappreciated) so I’d get scared.

My mind would go completely blank. I had no ideas. Worse yet (because of the panic), I couldn’t hear anything.

Something happened to me when I tried to improvise in a song with players that was TOTALLY different from when I improvised only with singers.

It felt like there was this giant wall in the middle of my brain. If I was singing an actual song, I couldn’t invent and if I was inventing, I couldn’t find the form or structure of a song.

It was like my spontaneous singing self lived on the wrong side of the tracks and was, if not actually unwelcome in songs with a form, made to feel she had arrived at the wrong time wearing the wrong outfit.

It didn’t help that the kind of improvising I was learning to do seemed completely separated from how my instrumentalist friends talked about and approached improvising.

I was looking for a magic doorway or secret passage that would let me reach the right side of my brain from the left and vice versa, and I couldn’t find it. For a time, I was well and truly stuck.

Flash forward a few years. I had finished music school and was participating in a year-long vocal improv course.

Things changed.

If I’m honest I can’t say exactly how or when, but they did.

Eventually I noticed that I could think while I was improvising. And I could hear.

I had ideas.

Improvising now felt like exploring a magical, new (or ancient) land, rather than stumbling around in the creepy basement of a haunted house.

In other words, it stopped feeling scary and started to feel exciting.

So what happened?

Well, I think I learned to trust myself enough to stop panicking and start listening. I stopped thinking about my spontaneous singing and my “other” singing as  two different things. When I sang, I sang. Sometimes I improvised, sometimes I didn’t.

In songs, I started using the structure of a song to help me create rather than feeling like it boxed me in.

I also gave myself permission and created a space (my monthly Songtaneous sessions) where I could practice improvising.

And I practiced. And practiced (and practiced).

In short, I built a bridge.

See, I had been looking for a magical doorway or opening so I could move from one side of my brain to the other. What I found (through a lot of practice) was a bridge that connected the two. (This makes complete sense; music is one of the only activities that engages the whole brain.)

Now when I improvise, I feel like I am standing in the middle of a bridge and ideas come to me from both sides of my brain.

I never had to travel between my right and left brain or cross some great (and imaginary) divide. I had to learn to build a bridge with the music and trust it to hold me and the song.

Speaking of practice …

I will teach a scatting workshop — Scat Singing Basics Improvising in Songs — on October 29th. My good friend Jennifer Parker has agreed to join us so we can work on singing spontaneously in songs and with an instrumentalist. Jen is a great piano player and an amazing jazz singer & improviser.

To learn more or register, click here.

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