CT-ACDA FEBRUARY NEWSLETTER

Greetings & Happy February! 

I am so happy to be reaching out to all of you with exciting updates from the ACDA student chapters of WCSU and UCONN, as well as reminders about registering for the ACDA Eastern Region Conference in Rochester - and of course, another important round of SAVE THE DATES!

I am also thrilled to be sharing a celebratory post from Jon Noyes - Director of the Fairfield Children's Choir -  Congratulations to the entire FCCC Staff and Choristers on their 25th Anniversary Season and upcoming performance at Carnegie Hall.

Rochester is only 3 weeks away! I look forward to seeing many of you there!

Amanda Hanzlik
President, CT-ACDA

ROCHESTER 2020!

REGISTER at https://acdaeast.org/division-conferences/rochester-2020/
Please attend the CONNECTICUT PARTY!
FRIDAY 6:00pm - The Street Craft Kitchen and Bar/ HYATT

Western Connecticut State University Student Chapter 
Clare Callahan, President

Western Connecticut State Universities chapter of ACDA has really seen some major changes this year. In 2019 the chapter elected a new executive board that made a significant impact. President: Clare Callahan, Vice President: Julia Giattino, Treasurer: Adam Giard Secretary: Madison Palmerino. At the end of 2018, there were 7 members but going into 2019 we had a strong 60 members. As an executive board, we worked to include everyone and change the face of our chapter. Spring of 2019 our advisor for the interim was Dr. Ellen Voth along with Dr. Kevin Isaacs. Fall 2019, we welcomed Dr. Jeremy Wiggins to the university, and he became our permanent advisor. We had a successful first set of choir concerts with him and excited for what he will be bringing to WCSU in the future.
We held events through the semester such as a choral share where upperclassmen would have a chance to conduct a choral piece of their choice. We had students sign up to act as the choir and made sure that we had an even amount of voices in each part. This event had a large turnout of 40 people with instrumental, jazz, audio and choral focuses. We are currently planning a choral festival for high school chamber choir groups that has been a success in the past. This festival will take place this coming march and will be adjudicated by Dr. Isaacs and Dr. Wiggins. ACDA is the organization that runs the event and is our biggest event of the year.
We had the largest turnout to a state conference this past fall in Guilford, CT. We had about 20 students that attended the conference.
Afterward, the executive board received so much positive feedback from students expressing that they were so glad that they went. We are now preparing for the ACDA Eastern Conference in Rochester, NY. We have 5 students attending the conference and are looking forward to the major conference. Clare Callahan was one of five students to have received the Kegerreis Scholarship which involved a big application process. This scholarship was designed to give financial support to students that wanted to attend the conference.
Going into 2020, we had just elected a new executive board. President: Madison Palmerino, Vice President: Anthony DeLuoc, Treasurer: Liam Alldredge Secretary: Madi Aug. They have come up with new ideas for events and getting more students involved for the future. We are excited for what the state and national chapter has in store for the future and being more involved.
 

The University of Connecticut Student Chapter
Spencer Sonnenberg, President

The UCONN ACDA has had several exciting updates in the past few months! Enrollment has increased this Spring 2020 and the organization attended the fall conference, in which UConn had shown in strong numbers and played vital roles in many key parts of the conference process. UConn Graduate students helped lead reading sessions and panels while student leaders helped to make the day a success engaging with choral musicians from across the state. Here on campus this Spring, UConn ACDA also hosted the first UConn Choral Festivals which were very successful including multiple schools in clinics provided by the UConn Choral faculty. During the festival, UConn ACDA brings both high school and middle school choirs to join in a productive weekend of music making with some of the best clinicians in the state. Membership into UConn ACDA is easy and can be accomplished by speaking with Dr. Spillane upon the start of every semester

Fairfield County Children’s Choir 25th Anniverary at Carnegie Hall

The Fairfield County Children’s Choir will present their 25th Anniversary Spring Concert on Saturday, May 16, 2020 at 8:00 PM at Stern Auditorium/Perelmen Stage at Carnegie Hall. Tickets will be available from $17 - $55 in late February at carnegiehall.org | CarnegieCharge 212-247-7800 | Carnegie Hall Box Office at 57th and Seventh.

The two-hour program, including intermission, will feature all four divisions of the FCCC. Selections will include include Ave Maria by Biebl, Sing Me to Heaven by Gawthrop, Wanting Memories by Barnwell, Shenandoah arr. by Noyes, Blue Skies arr. by Emerson, Bridge Over Troubled Water arr. by Shaw and a World Premiere Commission by Robert I. Hugh, among many other pieces.

The FCCC, comprised of over 300 choristers ages 9 - 19, has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Madison Square Garden, West Point, Tanglewood; in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Denver, Flagstaff, Boston, Hawaii, Canada, England, Ireland, Austria and Czech Republic. The group received two first place awards at the Golden Gate International Choral Festival in California in 2018. They will perform in Paris and at the World Choir Games in Belgium in July 2020.

The Fairfield County Children’s Choir can be found at www.SingFCCC.org.
 

SAVE THE DATES


ACDA at CMEA!

Reading Session - Round table Discussion
Social Hour with All State Conductors Jeff Douma and Tesfa Wondemagnehu
Hartford Convention Center - April 3, 2020

CT-ACDA SPRING CONFERENCE

ON THE HORIZON! - Scheduling/Planning/Repertoire for 2020-2021
(Registration will open in April)
Hartford - May 30, 2020

CT-ACDA SUMMER SING - N - SOCIAL

Shoreline Location TBD - August 22 or 29, 2020 (TBD)

Holiday Message from R & R Chairs Lauren Verney-Fink & Kevin Cotellese

Sound familiar?  It’s the day before winter break.  At this point, you are running on fuel provided purely by coffee, determination, and those holiday cookies you ate for breakfast as you flew out the door.  Your final holiday caroling gig is complete, and you are counting down the minutes until break! But wait- you have to get started on a whole new round of repertoire in January….lists that either are non-existent or filled with holes.  What are you going to do?

  • Over the Rainbow- Harold Arlen, arr. Andy Beck, SATB (also SSAB and TTBB), Alfred Music Pub.

    • Very doable for a beginning level! Can add ukelele or get creative! Great for any portion of program!

  • Dide Ta Deo- Nigerian Folk Song, arr. Uzee Brown, Jr.- SATB, Roger Dean Music Co.

  • Go ‘Way From My Window- John Jacob Niles, arr. Purifoy, SATB (also SAB and SSA), Hal Leonard Corp.

  • Baba Yetu- Christopher Tin, SSATBB (also SATB, SSAA, and TTBB). Hal Leonard Corp.

  • Cantate Domino- Jay Althouse, SATB, Alfred Music Publishing 

    • Also available SAB - Great opener!

  • O Occhi Manza Mia- Orlando di Lasso, arr. Robinson, 3 part mixed, Alfred

Intermediate/Advanced Mixed Ensemble

  • If Music Be the Food of Love, David Dickau, Jo-Michael Schiebe Choral Series

    • Also available SSAA and TTBB

  • Cradle Songs- Steven Stucky, SATB, Theodore Presser Co.

  • Rouxinol Do Pico Preto

  • Lulajze, Jezuniu

  • Buy, Baby Ribbon

    • The text of the 3 pieces come from widely varied sources.  Brazilian lullaby, a Polish carol, and a lullaby from the Carribean island of Tobago.

  • Bumble Bee- Anders Edenroth, SSAATB, Walton Music - Also available SSAA

  • Exsultate Deo- Jacob Narverud, SATB, Alliance Music Pub.

    • Good festival piece with lots of changing meters and nice tone clusters. Would be a great opener for a set!

  • John the Revelator- Caldwell & Ivory, SSAATTBB, Earthsongs

    • A great tried and true closer for a set, but maybe you haven’t done it yet! 

  • I’m a Train- Hammond & Hazelwood, arr. Peter Knight, it says SATB (but really SSAATBB), Hal Leonard Corp.

Treble Ensemble

  • Gerakina- Greek Folk song, arr. Henry Leck, 3 part treble, Hal Leonard Corp.

    • Great opener!  7/8 time!

  • There Is Sweet Music Here- Mary Lynn Lightfoot, SSA, Heritage Press

    • Also available SATB - Great for a spring concert!

  • Joy- Jocelyn Hagan, SSA, Boosey & Hawkes Inc.

  • My Heart for Any Fate- Michael John Trotta, SSAA

  • Even When He is Silent- Kim Andre Arnesen, SSAA

  • Witches’ chorus from Macbeth- Giuseppe Verdi, Ed. Rutter, SSA

We highly recommend you purchase the book Opera Choruses, Ed. by John Rutter, Oxford University Press.  It’s a great book!

Want to share your favorites? Contact your R&R chair!

Thoughts from Ellen Gilson Voth

A few weeks have passed and I'm still digesting Oct. 19 - all the energy of singing, reconnecting, refueling and remembering why we do what we do. This year our fall conference happened for me in a completely new way - a visit to Montclair, New Jersey, to speak at a memorial event for a mentor of mine. 

His name was Nixon Bicknell (1932-2019) - a musical fixture in my hometown and high school, as exacting as he was incredibly caring. I remember my audition for him, the composition assignment he gave that sparked a young composer's voice, countless rehearsals and concerts, our last performance at graduation, and staying in touch in the years since. After his passing this spring, I was humbled to be invited to speak at a tribute to his memory. Being back in the choral room, reconnecting with teachers and alums, seeing his wife after their 60 + years of marriage, her spirit just as magnetic as I remember - all of that meant the world. But, what to say? How do you capture a long legacy in a few minutes? How do you unpack it for people who remember Nixon well at the same time you unpack it for young singers in the room, more than a generation removed from him?

In the week leading up to this, I kept coming back to one of his Commencement traditions - a piece about last words - and my thoughts went along these lines: 

*****

"What would Nixon want his legacy to be? How would he want to be remembered? His unswerving commitment to excellent performance, yes…his dedication to making our school's music program as strong as possible, yes…but there's something else to take from that Commencement piece about passing the baton. If we pursue justice, if we persevere in tough times, if we show respect for people who are like us as well as those who aren't, if we live our lives with integrity – then we have the potential to bring the hope of sun to a dark world, to be the "light of a morning without clouds". Whatever we're meant to do in life,  we can bring rain to other people – the kind of rain that soaks the "grass springing out of the earth" and gives it the nourishment it needs. The baton is ours, now.  When it is my time to go – our time to go – will other people say that we brought sun and rain to them? Will they say that being in our presence  - for a day, or a month, or years in the same job, or a long-term relationship - made them better, richer people?"

*****

As I'm typing this, Thanksgiving is around the corner. I was fortunate to learn from someone who believed in my potential, whose influence steered me toward a life in music. ACDA is one-of-a-kind for how it puts us in a community of people who live this - people who inspire and challenge us to be our best selves. People whose lives mix with ours and all the thrilling experiences and mundane tasks and life-giving moments that happen because we sing, and lead others to sing.

Thankful this year for Nixon, and for all of you. For us. 

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