Rules of the Road for Guest Singers!

June 10th, 2009

I usually don’t post in the middle of the month, but I’m bursting here so I’m going to change the rules for this month…maybe for good. Who knows? Many of you are asking for more frequent posts, so….

Over the weekend, I was asked to perform with a local band here in Corpus at the site of what is known here as the “Walk of Fame”. It emulates the “Stars” on Hollywood Blvd in Los Angeles, and pays tribute to some of the musicians here who have advanced the “live” music scene in town. The gentleman for whom I was performing is one of the guys who started the tradition of an annual Jazz Festival here in Corpus Christi, back in 1960, and who has been very helpful to me personally, so I was proud and honored to participate.

Now, I do not in any way wish to set myself up as a paragon of virtue with this blog, but I will express what I believe is an example of what is correct and respectful and what is NOT!

When my turn to sing came up, I stepped upon the stage, said a couple of words about the gentleman who was being honored, how much I admired him and appreciated being asked to help celebrate his star on the “walk of fame”, and then sang my songs.

When you sing with a Jazz group, it’s a collaboration, not a personal showcase.

After the first time through a song, the professional singer moves to the side and allows each instrumentalist who wishes to improvise on the song, ample time to do so, and this usually includes, the horns, the keyboard, the guitar, and the bass player, and on fast tunes, the drummer.

My first song was a slow one, so there was a sax solo and then a keyboard solo, and then I got the nod to come back in and I sang the song out. The second song was an up tempo jazz standard and everybody got into that one, including the bass player and the drummer, exchanging 4 bars each for an entire chorus of the song. Again, I was off on the side while the instrumentalists did their solos, and sang it out only after they indicated to me that they were finished. When I was finished with my 2 songs, I thanked the honoree for inviting me and the crowd for their reception and I left the stage. That was professional and appropriate for the occasion.

There was another singer there who had asked if he could sing with the band as well, and was offered an opportunity to do so. He stepped up, took the microphone and began what I can only refer to as “his Act”. We, the audience were “graced” with stories of where this singer came from, how many famous musicians he had traveled with all over the world, and after about 10 whole minutes of that, he finally got around to singing. He sang a ballad, and after the first time through, one of the horn players on the stage decided to take a solo. The singer obviously, unaware of bandstand protocol, despite his many travels with “famous” world-class musicians, interrupted the horn player by coming back in on the second half of the song, which automatically made it totally impossible for any other musician on stage to play a solo if he had wanted to.

He then proceeded to inform us, the audience that he had worked 4 jobs in the 3 nights leading up to this day, and his apologized for being hoarse, but then offered to sing another song anyway. (Who asked him?)

He did another ballad, (that in itself is just plain bad programming), and this time actually had the temerity to sing along with the intrumental solo, and then talk more in the middle of it.

I was incensed at first…until I got the idea from this amateurish, egomaniac’s performance to write a book on appropriate behavior on the bandstand when you are an invited guest singer.

Singers! Please understand!

Not every singing occasion is your personal showcase! You must adjust your behavior for different venues.

The young man who sang on Sunday for the inductee to the Walk of Fame was clueless to that fact, and took the opportunity as his chance to promote HIMSELF,  in a venue where it was simply not appropriate to do so.

I shall be writing a book on this subject and will keep you posted here on the blog site about it’s release date.

As always, I welcome your comments!

News for June from Sing Your Life

May 31st, 2009

June Newsletter – 2009
 

Our Singers’ Network is growing daily and from what I see, it’s becoming a real resource for our members. Let me encourage those of you who have been part of the Sing Your Life family by reading the newsletters to take that next step and join the community of singers we have created for you at www.singyourlife.ning.com
 

I think I have figured out why many of you are reluctant to join. I think as we mature, some of us become extremely private and do not wish to expose ourselves to the trivial chatting that comes with being part of a social network. Am I correct about that? Even my SoCal contingent, who have supported me for years have been laying back from coming into our “family” for fear of having unwelcome emails showing up in their inbox on a daily basis.
 

So let me once again, make this very clear. My Singers’ network is a safe and nurturing space, where YOU decide what messages you get in your inbox, YOU participate in whatever way you choose to:
·        you can read what your fellow singers are expressing about their singing lives,
·        or watch an instructional video by yours truly,
·        or post some music
·        or simply lay back and stay pretty much anonymous.
It’s totally up to you, singers!
 

So let me tell you what we’ve got coming up.
 

Coming in July, we are planning a “live” tele-class on performance issues, and we will be joined by a special guest whom I have coaxed into joining us. We will cover some of the issues you wanted addressed with the Q&A series of videos, but which require more in depth responses like:

  1. How to sing with Emotion
  2. Being totally comfortable on stage
  3. How to put together a show
  4. How to hold your audience for the duration of the performance

My special guest, and dear old friend has been a musical director who has worked with a gazillion singers, (including me), and has been a conductor for many famous artists. He will offer his unique perspective on what it takes to truly succeed on any stage.
 

We’re also continuing with the mini-lessons on vocal technique, and the Q&A series on video.
 

And we’re planning a “DUETS” Project for members ONLY! Two of you will join forces, (and voices) to create a duet. The song can be one that was written specifically designed for 2 people to sing, or it can be a song that was not written to be performed as a duet, but you want to sing it in that way.
 

Here’s how it’ll work:

  • Those who want to try it, will send me a list of songs they’d like to sing with another singer.
  • I will compare the lists I receive and suggest people who I think would sing well as a duo. Of course, you may always state your preference for a duet partner…this IS a collaboration after all!!
  • Together, we will arrange the songs, giving each singer their share of  lines to sing and their harmony parts if they want to sing harmony.
  • The individual parts will be recorded, and then
  • We’ll mix them together in a duet.

The tracks will be posted and voted on for which duet was the best, and the winners will be awarded a special prize to be announced at a later date.
 

I have already posted a duet that was created here by me and one of our members just to get the ball rolling. Naturally, our duet is not officially a part of the DUET project, just an example of how it can be done.
 

Okay! That does it for news from the Singers’ Network site! Please JOIN US!!
 

………
 

On with this month’s featured article!!
 

With the “hoop-lah” finally over with this season’s “American Idol”, I have become inspired to write another book as a companion to the “The Art of Singing” series, we’ve had on the market now for 7 years.
 

Those books have hit a resonant chord with singers of all ages, all skill levels, all genre preferences, and from all corners of the earth.
 

The first book teaches basic singing technique to give the singer the correct way to sing as an automatic cell memory so he/she cam perform without ever having to think about how to breathe, how to “attack” notes, but just concentrate on communicating with the audience.
 

Book # 2, on Stage Presence, which is offered on our singers’ network as our gift to our members, talks about the ego’s interference and other distractions when we get up onto a stage to perform.
 

The 3rd Book is all about musicality, and seeks to teach the singer how to understand the notes, rhythms, and

harmonies of the songs he/she sings, and how to know his/her range and keys he/she sings in, and how to count the beats of music.
 

And the 4th Book is all about Promotion, and how to navigate through the labyrinth of “come-ons” and move from the

hyped up salesman speak to controlling one’s own destiny with regard to a career in music if that is the desire.
 

And NOW, since watching this season’s American Idol, where it became pretty clear that the outcome had been planned to be exactly what it became, I decided upon a serious guide book of rules for the aspiring singer, which I am naming, ”Get Off The Bandstand”. Generally speaking, this book is meant to keep you in a state of total gratitude for your talent, and in the mood to share it always, but with respect for it and for yourself!
 Have you ever been to a wedding where one of the guests approaches the bandstand to request that “Aunt Sally” be allowed to come up and sing for the happy couple? After many moments of Q & A with the band members, which might go somewhat like this:
“What would you like to sing?”
“Um…Gee, I can’t think of anything.”
“Well, how ‘bout a nice wedding song?”
“Uh, Yeah…I know um…the “Hawaiian Wedding song?”
“Okay, key?”
“Huh?”,
“What key do you sing it in?”.
“Oh! Dunno! Wait! Someone once told me I sing in C. Does that sound right?”�
“whatever!”
Aunt Sally sings the song, in the wrong key and forgetting most of the words, but nevertheless, the wedding guests, wishing to be polite and supportive, enthusiastically applaud her efforts…which she reads as artistic approval, (wrong read…entirely), and so she decides to sing more songs. The problem is that Aunt Sally cannot really sing, doesn’t really know any song all the way through, and after the initial support from the crowd, they are restless, embarrassed, clearly uncomfortable, and the band doesn’t know how to graciously get rid of this person, as she has most assuredly worn out her welcome…big time!
 

My book will serve as a guide for aspiring artists who have the urge and desire to sing, but do not yet understand the correct protocol for doing so. Whether a professional singer or not, if you choose to perform, please know when you do, you represent an art form that celebrates personal expression of the deepest level and therefore MUST be treated with reverence and respect, even awe!
 

I suppose it was inevitable that mediocrity would eventually creep into the world of the Arts! And indeed, some would say, it has always been here…hiding in the shadows. I suppose that’s correct. And I can remember my parents absolutely despising the 50’s doo-op songs, but their disdain motivated them to take us kids to the opera and expose us to big bands, or insist that we listen to the Greek Hour every Sunday. And my parents’ parents probably thought Benny Goodman was as dangerous as Elvis, so sure…it’s a matter of personal taste, and I get that!
 

And it could also be said that although commerce dictates the “trends” in music, and that the bubble gum sounds of the Disney Channel represent a segment of the listening public who keep the music business’s economy running, this fact alone is not enough of a reason to relegate music into some insipid “entertainment” category, much the same as video games and gambling. Shouldn’t we be maintaining the importance of music in our lives as more than some superficial “feel-good” pill?  Especially for those of us who SING to express ourselves, it IS so much more than that, isn’t it?
 

“To sing is to love and affirm, to fly and to soar, to coast into the hearts of people who listen, to tell them that life is to live, that love is there, that nothing is a promise, but that beauty exists, and must be hunted for and found.”
Joan Baez - American Singer/Songwriter

 “When I am singing, I am inside of it…I feel, oh, like it feels when you’re first in love, when you’re touching someone–chills, things slipping all over me…A lot of times, when I get off the stage, I want to make love”
Janis Joplin - American Blues Singer 

 “Once I had a dream to live and love, and this dream became music. It touched all of the beautiful experiences I have searched for or known. Each sound was a color, and each color was a warm feeling, and my heart kept the tempo.”
Les McCann - American Jazz Pianist 

“He who lets his breath, hence his life force, flow consentingly as a willing sound sacrifice from the depths of his body, sings his life; for singing means to affirm life, to free oneself, and thereby to bring happiness and prosperity to oneself, and consequently to one’s fellow man.”�

Marius Schneider – German Musicologist who found musical symbols in German Mythology

I know I’ve used these quotes before, but I write them down here again to remind you of the value of the gift you have been given of a singing voice. It’s a gift to be grateful for and to be cherished and treated with care and respect, always!

Note: I am gathering stories about experiences you may have had either as a singer singing with a band, or as a band member dealing with a singer on stage. Please send me whatever you have, funny, sad, outrageous, whatever. Feel free to change names so no one’s embarrassed, okay?
 

See ya next month, Singers!!
 

Sin[g]cerely,
Chrys
 

Sing 4 Your Life - May Newsletter, 2009

April 30th, 2009

May News

As many of you know already, I created this site with inspiration that I received from another Ning site I am a part of called the Boundless Living Challenge. It’s a place where I participate with others, spending 45 days at a time focusing on a specific intention or desire for my life. It could be anything I desire to do or have, or it could be something about myself or my situation that I would like to change, but somehow have felt unable to do so.
I found that using deliberate intention can acheive things I never even dreamed of, and I have had multitudinous a-ha moments of clarity, insight and wisdom by being part of the Boundless Living Challenge.

I’ve also learned interesting and valuable lessons, one of which I want to talk to you about this month.

It can be a great thing to enter into a process of self exploration to discover the real YOU, the powerful and talented person you may never have allowed to come out and play before, but there CAN be a danger too.

The danger lies with the ego…and the possibility of becoming self-absorbed, which can lead to thoughts of fear, resentment, even embittered envy toward others. This can happen IF we lose sight of the fact that our talent is a gift and NOT something we ourselves created. This gift doesn’t make us better or more special, (although what we DO with our gifts DOES make us very special.)

The danger in self-exploration can also lead to comparing ourselves with others and in doing so, feeling
competitive and wanting to WIN. It’s at these times that we really need to start changing our thinking from
the competitive to the creative, and with complete and utter gratitude, use our talents for the good it can do in the world.
That, of course, does not mean that you must only be relegated to singing in your church choir and cannot have a wonderful life and earn a sizeable income from your talent. When I say use your talent for good in the world, of course, I am including the good it can do for your own world as well as those you touch. It’s more the quality of joy you bring forth than anything else…do you see this?

I want you to OWN your talent and be proud of it, but not to flaunt it, or make others feel bad about themselves because they don’t seem to have it.

I read something so wonderful the other day that I have reprinted here for you to take in and feel really and truly grateful to call yourself a SINGER!! Of course I have said what is written below thousands of times to you over the years, but it’s great to be validated by others.

This address to incoming freshmen of the Boston Conservatory uses classical music examples exclusively to make the speaker’s point, but music is music and its language is understood in all of its dialects.

Here’s the speech! Enjoy…and be proud of your talent:

Welcome address to freshmen at Boston Conservatory, given by Karl Paulnack, pianist and director of music division at Boston Conservatory.�
“One of my parents’ deepest fears, I suspect, is that society would not properly value me as a musician, that I wouldn’t be appreciated. I had very good grades in high school, I was good in science and math, and they imagined that as a doctor or a research chemist or an engineer, I might be more appreciated than I would be as a musician. I still remember my mother’s remark when I announced my decision to apply to music school-she said, “you’re WASTING your SAT scores.” On some level, I think, my parents were not sure themselves what the value of music was, what its purpose was. And they LOVED music, they listened to classical music all the time. They just weren’t really clear about its function. So let me talk about that a little bit, because we live in a society that puts music in the “arts and entertainment” section of the newspaper, and serious music, the kind your kids are about to engage in, has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with entertainment, in fact it’s the opposite of entertainment. Let me talk a little bit about music, and how it works.
The first people to understand how music really works were the ancient Greeks. And this is going to fascinate you; the Greeks said that music and astronomy were two sides of the same coin. Astronomy was seen as the study of relationships between observable, permanent, external objects, and music was seen as the study of relationships between invisible, internal, hidden objects. Music has a way of finding the big, invisible moving pieces inside our hearts and souls and helping us figure out the position of things inside us. Let me give you some examples of how this works.
One of the most profound musical compositions of all time is the Quartet for the End of Time written by French composer Olivier Messiaen in 1940. Messiaen was 31 years old when France entered the war against Nazi Germany. He was captured by the Germans in June of 1940, sent across Germany in a cattle car and imprisoned in a concentration camp.  He was fortunate to find a sympathetic prison guard who gave him paper and a place to ompose. There were three other musicians in the camp, a cellist, a violinist, and a clarinetist, and Messiaen wrote his quartet with these specific players in mind. It was performed in January 1941 for four thousand prisoners and guards in the prison camp. Today it is one of the most famous masterworks in the repertoire.
Given what we have since learned about life in the concentration camps, why would anyone in his right mind waste time and energy writing or playing music? There was barely enough energy on a good day to find food and water, to avoid a beating, to stay warm, to escape torture-why would anyone bother with music? And yet, from the camps, we have poetry, we have music, we have visual art; it wasn’t just this one fanatic Messiaen; many, many people created art. Why?
Well, in a place where people are only focused on survival, on the bare necessities, the obvious conclusion is that art must be, somehow, essential for life. The camps were without money, without hope, without commerce, without recreation, without basic respect, but they were not without art. Art is part of survival; art is part of the human spirit, an unquenchable expression of who we are. Art is one of the ways in which we say, “I am alive, and my life has meaning.”
On September 12, 2001 I was a resident of Manhattan. That morning I reached a new understanding of my art and its relationship to the world. I sat down at the piano that morning at 10 AM to practice as was my daily routine; I did it by force of habit, without thinking about it. I lifted the cover on the keyboard, and opened my music, and put my hands on the keys and took my hands off the keys. And I sat there and thought, does this even matter? Isn’t this completely irrelevant? Playing the piano right now, given what happened in this city yesterday, seems silly, absurd, irreverent, pointless. Why am I here? What place has a musician in this moment in time? Who needs a piano player right now? I was completely lost.
And then I, along with the rest of New York, went through the journey of getting through that week. I did not play the piano that day, and in fact I contemplated briefly whether I would ever want to play the piano again. And then I observed how we got through the day. At least in my neighborhood, we didn’t shoot hoops or play Scrabble. We didn’t play cards to pass the time, we didn’t watch TV, we didn’t shop, we most certainly did not go to the mall. The first organized activity that I saw in New York, that same day, was singing. People sang. People sang around fire houses, people sang “We Shall Overcome”. Lots of people sang America the Beautiful. The first organized public event that I remember was the Brahms Requiem, later that week, at Lincoln Center, with the New York Philharmonic. The first organized public expression of grief, our first communal response to that historic event, was a concert. That was the beginning of a sense that life might go on. The US Military secured the airspace, but recovery was led by the arts, and by music in particular, that very night.
From these two experiences, I have come to understand that music is not part of “arts and entertainment” as the newspaper section would have us believe. It’s not a luxury, a lavish thing that we fund from leftovers of our budgets, not a plaything or an amusement or a pass time. Music is a basic need of human survival. Music is one of the ways we make sense of our lives, one of the ways in which we express feelings when we have no words, a way for us to understand things with our hearts when we can’t with our minds.
Some of you may know Samuel Barber’s heartrendingly beautiful piece Adagio for Strings. If you don’t know it by that name, then some of you may know it as the background music which accompanied the Oliver Stone movie Platoon, a film about the Vietnam War. If you know that piece of music either way, you know it has the ability to crack your heart open like a walnut; it can make you cry over sadness you didn’t know you had. Music can slip beneath our conscious reality to get at what’s really going on inside us the way a good therapist does.
I bet that you have never been to a wedding where there was absolutely no music. There might have been only a little music, there might have been some really bad music, but I bet you there was some music. And something very predictable happens at weddings-people get all pent up with all kinds of emotions, and then there’s some musical moment where the action of the wedding stops and someone sings or plays the flute or something. And even if the music is lame, even if the quality isn’t good, predictably 30 or 40 percent of the people who are going to cry at a wedding cry a couple of moments after the music starts. Why? The Greeks.
Music allows us to move around those big invisible pieces of ourselves and rearrange our insides so that we can express what we feel even when we can’t talk about it. Can you imagine watching Indiana Jones or Superman or Star Wars with the dialogue but no music? What is it about the music swelling up at just the right moment in ET so that all the softies in the audience start crying at exactly the same moment? I guarantee you if you showed the movie with the music stripped out, it wouldn’t happen that way. The Greeks: Music is the understanding of the relationship between invisible internal objects.
I’ll give you one more example, the story of the most important concert of my life. I must tell you I have played a little less than a thousand concerts in my life so far. I have played in places that I thought were important. I like playing in Carnegie Hall; I enjoyed playing in Paris; it made me very happy to please the critics in St. Petersburg. I have played for people I thought were important; music critics of major newspapers, foreign heads of state. The most important concert of my entire life took place in a nursing home in Fargo, ND, about 4 years ago.
I was playing with a very dear friend of mine who is a violinist. We began, as we often do, with Aaron Copland’s Sonata, which was written during World War II and dedicated to a young friend of Copland’s, a young pilot who was shot down during the war. Now we often talk to our audiences about the pieces we are going to play rather than providing them with written program notes. But in this case, because we began the concert with this piece, we decided to talk about the piece later in the program and to just come out and play the music without explanation.
Midway through the piece, an elderly man seated in a wheelchair near the front of the concert hall began to weep. This man, whom I later met, was clearly a soldier-even in his 70’s. It was clear from his buzz-cut hair, square jaw and general demeanor that he had spent a good deal of his life in the military. I thought it a little bit odd that someone would be moved to tears by that particular movement of that particular piece, but it wasn’t the first time I’ve heard crying in a concert and we went on with the concert and finished the piece. When we came out to play the next piece on the program, we decided to talk about both the first and second pieces, and we described the circumstances in which the Copland was written and mentioned its dedication to a downed pilot. The man in the front of the audience became so disturbed that he had to leave the auditorium.
 I honestly figured that we would not see him again, but he did come backstage afterwards, tears and all, to explain himself. What he told us was this: “During World War II, I was a pilot, and I was in an aerial combat situation where one of my team’s planes was hit. I watched my friend bail out, and watched his parachute open, but the Japanese planes which had engaged us returned and machine gunned across the parachute chords so as to separate the parachute from the pilot, and I watched my friend drop away into the ocean, realizing that he was lost. I have not thought about this for many years, but during that first piece of music you played, this memory returned to me so vividly that it was as though I was reliving it. I didn’t understand why this was happening, why now, but then when you came out to explain that this piece of music was written to commemorate a lost pilot, it was a little more than I could handle. How does the music do that? How did it find those feelings and those memories in me?”
Remember the Greeks: music is the study of invisible relationships between internal objects. This concert in Fargo was the most important work I have ever done. For me to play for this old soldier and help him connect, somehow, with Aaron Copland, and to connect their memories of their lost friends, to help him remember and mourn his friend, this is my work. This is why music matters.
If we were a medical school, and you were here as a med student practicing appendectomies, you’d take your work very seriously because you would imagine that some night at two AM someone is going to waltz into your emergency room and you’re going to have to save their life. Well, my friends, someday at 8 PM someone is going to walk into your concert hall and bring you a mind that is confused, a heart that is overwhelmed, a soul that is weary. Whether they go out whole again will depend partly on how well you do your craft.
You’re not here to become an entertainer, and you don’t have to sell yourself. The truth is you don’t have anything to sell; being a musician isn’t about dispensing a product, like selling used Chevies. I’m not an entertainer; I’m a lot closer to a paramedic, a firefighter, a rescue worker. You’re here to become a sort of therapist for the human soul, a spiritual version of a chiropractor, physical therapist, someone who works with our insides to see if they get things to line up, to see if we can come into harmony with ourselves and be healthy and happy and well.
Frankly, ladies and gentlemen, I expect you not only to master music; I expect you to save the planet. If there is a future wave of wellness on this planet, of harmony, of peace, of an end to war, of mutual understanding, of equality, of fairness, I don’t expect it will come from a government, a military force or a corporation. I no longer even expect it to come from the religions of the world, which together seem to have brought us as much war as they have peace. If there is a future of peace for humankind, if there is to be an understanding of how these invisible, internal things should fit together, I expect it will come from the artists, because that’s what we do. As in the concentration camp and the evening of 9/11, the artists are the ones who might be able to help us with our internal, invisible lives.”

 

 

April Newsletter from Sing Your Life!!

March 29th, 2009

Hello to all of you singers who have made the transition from the emailed newsletter to this web-based format!
 

I hope you have arrived here safely!!
 

Be sure to bookmark this page as it’s the official address of the newsletter, so you can return here on the first of every month to read the latest news and articles from Sing Your Life!
 

Man! It has been an incredible month, singers! Lotsa stuff happening around here! The singers social network is growing daily, and of course we are looking for more singers all the time to add to the fun.
 

I’ve heard from some of you that it appears to be a bit daunting…joining the network…not so much the joining act itself, but the being part of the network. What’s expected? Do you have to post your singing clips for all to hear? Do you have to talk to other singers on a daily basis? What’s its purpose?
 

I’m going to answer all these questions in this newsletter, plus write a short article on over-singing, it causes and cures. But first…
 

I’ve been trying to recall when I became moved or, to use a more spiritual term, “called” to teach, because I am so grateful for the chance to do something for other people that I love so much. Anyway, so I was asking myself WHEN the teaching bug grabbed hold of me, and an amazing thing happened!
 

One day, while looking for places online to find singers who might be seeking a community where they could interact with others like themselves, share their music, and stories with each other, etc., someone suggested I get on Face Book. I always thought of Face Book as the adult version of My Space, but I gave it a try and signed up!!
 

Suddenly, and I mean almost immediately, I was knocked out of the present day and thrust at lightening speed into my past. Within just a very few days of joining Face Book, old friends started comin’ out of the woodwork and knocking on the door of my heart.
 

About 32 years ago, I lived for a brief time in Scottsdale, AZ. Having “escaped” from New York at the height of the Summer, we had planned to go to California, but the car died on a Sunday afternoon in a tiny town outside of the Phoenix-Scottsdale area  called Strawberry. The temperature was 125°. We ended up staying.
 

I got a job at the Dinner Theater of sorts, where every person who worked there, from the busboys and bar-backs to the waiters and waitresses,
and even the hostesses, performed for the crowd.
 

It was a truly magical place that was felt by every customer that entered. The Musical Director was more than brilliant in his understanding of talents and correct song choice. He knew exactly what each singer was capable of and presented each in the very best light. But he was also an extraordinary musician in his own right, and a ring master in the way he would warm the crowd into anticipation for each singer, giving them the confidence to night after night dazzle the audiences.
 

It was my good fortune to stumble into this place one night and get to sing to the remarkable accompaniments of the musical director.
Actually that performance turned out to be my “audition”. He asked me what I wanted to sing. I answered, “You Made Me Love You”. “Would you happen to know the KEY you sing that in?”. He asked. “Sure! It’s in G!” As I sang that old Judy Garland gem, my next 3 1/2 years were carved in stone. I became part of a “family” of 34, all with egos the size of Montana, and hearts the size of Texas. J
 
And around March 15th of this year, all these beautiful people came popping one by one back into my life!
 

So I’d been searching my memory for when I decided that I would make a good voice teacher, using my own experiences with my mentor from the University of Illinois, who literally gave me back my voice after I totally lost it at 24, and here was the answer, among all these crazy, fabulous people from Jed Nolan’s Music Hall.
 

It was during those 3 1/2 years that I started teaching singers my mentor’s method of vocal strength and maintaining one’s voice over time.

It’s become my specialty you might say. And for me, there’s nothing that quite satisfies like seeing the face of a mature singer who once believed his or her voice was completely gone and would never return, and then hearing and feeling her voice come out of her body as it once did, years earlier.
 
Gotta tell ya’…I love what I do!
 

I guess it’s one of the reasons I started my Singers Social Network on Ning, and why I invite you to become a part of it!  Here’s the link: http://www.singyourlife.ning.com.
 

A Social Network could have a few uneasy ramifications for some, so let me clarify what we do over on my Singers Community site.
 

  • We meet each other…or not.
  • We put up our recorded song clips…or not.
  • We participate in workshops and seminars on singing…or not.
  • We enter contests and compete…or not.

Notice the “OR NOT” part!
 

You are not obligated in any way whatsoever to participate in any of the structured activities…it’s very much like being a cruise ship and choosing to just sit in a lounging chair and read a book, rather than play the games the social director has decided would make you enjoy yourself.
 

Yes! I will write to you now and then and encourage you to sing for us, but you certainly don’t have to…at all….EVER!
 

I hope that’s clear…
 

Okay! On to this month’s feature article on Over-singing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 

Over-singing occurs when we begin to examine ourselves during a performance.

It can happen
 

  • as a result of the microphone levels being too low and not being able to hear ourselves through the sound system,
  • or the crowd isn’t listening to us, or
  • we have some physical problem that we’re concerned about, or
  • we are desperate to make an impression, as in an audition or contest of some sort, or
  • we’re nervous about missing a lyric or hitting a certain note.
  • Any number of external or internal issues are distracting us.

These factors enter our consciousness and we get thrown, which starts us looking inside of ourselves at what is wrong with what we’re doing.
We start putting ourselves under a microscope in our mind to find the cause of our discomfort. This only leads to further distraction.
 
So what do we do? Stop LOOKING INSIDE!
 

Let’s get a little scientific about this.
 

You cannot be the specimen in the jar and the scientist at the same time.
 

It’s impossible for the viewer of a specimen under a microscope and the specimen itself to be the same! You see this, right?
 

The time for self-examining is your practice time. When you step up onto a stage or bandstand and take the microphone, you must STOP self-examination and simply sing your song…to the audience, or to whatever picture you’ve place in your mind as the recipient of your performance.
 

That’s it…pure and simple.
 

Now, is there a way for you to know when you’re over-singing? Sure is.
 

  • Are you getting more tired as you sing?
  • Is your throat closing up?
  • Do you run out of air easily?
  • These are certain clues that you are probably over-singing.

And by the way, what I mean by over-singing, for those of you who are not familiar with the term, is singing that is forced and uncomfortable, and not just for you, but your listeners as well.
 

The more you try too hard to overcome your fatigue, the more uncomfortable you become, and the more fidgety your audience gets too.
 

The cure for over-singing is not self-exploration during a performance, but more serious and deliberate practicing to raise your comfort level when you DO perform.
 

When you act as your own coach with objectivity, you are able to hear the entire performance including the flaws, and correct them for a better outcome.
 

But try not to subjectively criticize yourself, even during practice because once you are hearing ONLY the flaws, rather than any of what is good about your performance, you may easily sink into frustration and even depression.
 

There’s an enormous difference between self-evaluation and self-criticism, and how to practice constructively.
 

Critical points to know BEFORE any performance:

  1.       Know your words,
  2.       know your notes,
  3.       choose the right songs for you, in the correct keys for you,
  4.       ALWAYS DO A SOUND CHECK,
  5.       and feel a connection to what you’re doing up there.
     

     My new motto: Don’t IMPRESS - EX-PRESS!
 

Feel free to comment on this blog or any other blog. And to be in connected to conversations like these on a regular basis, please come and join my Singers Social Network!!
 

“til next time, Singers!
 

Chrys
 


 

Song Choice and Performance Attitude

March 1st, 2009

Hi Singers!

Can you believe it’s almost Spring time again? I think time is moving faster and faster the older I get. Maybe that’s why I feel so determined to accomplish the dreams that burn in my heart non-stop, 24-7. And those dreams include you, dear singers! I continue to motivate you to share your talent with others, in whatever capacity you care to because I really believe it creates and expands our life…and does not tear it down.
 

When you think about it, lots of what we do day to day is about tearing down, doncha think? Oh, not in a malicious way, no! But without meaning to, we pollute, we waste, we hate, we fight…and in so doing, the whole world gets sick. Sharing our God-given gifts with each other, with strangers, with anyone really…this heals and lifts up! This is my purpose on earth, and when you know your purpose, people, well, there’s isn’t anything you can do but follow it.
 

To that end, we have expanded our Sing Your Life website to include a social network of singers worldwide to display their talents and hone their skills.


Have YOU joined us yet???
 

The site is growing and we have some big plans, including “live” seminars and workshops, contests, and more. I will continue to encourage you to network with other singers because merely by writing to each other on the site, you are sharing your energy, and making real connections. Okay! Enough of that! For today at least, no more coaxing…
On to this month’s article…
 

SONG CHOICE 

When you do what you love, work, though sometimes a bit tedious, isn’t really working as most people would describe it. With years of freeway grid lock behind me, I create my own schedule and do my best to stick to it. And I love every minute!
 
When I’m not with my local students, teaching, recording their demos, finding music that suits them, or working on my websites, I take breaks and watch the Tennis Channel, and for the next few weeks, “American Idol”.
 
I get much inspiration for these articles from the judges and coaches I hear in these programs, and can always find a parallel for you singers.
 
For example, the other night on “Idol”, Simon remarked that most of the contestants had chosen the wrong song, and when one of the singers was asked for a comment on Simon’s remark,  the singer answered, “Well I respect him, but I disagree. I LOVE THAT SONG!”
 
I often get that same response from my own students, and I want to give a rebuttal on the subject!
 
If you LOVE THAT SONG….great! Love it! Put it on your I-pod, and play it all day in your ears, but if it’s not the right song for you, your personality, your essence as an artist, for Pete’s sake, DON’T SING IT!!  

You will love a million songs in your life, but they will not always be songs that are right for you to be singing, do you get this?
 
I fall in love with songs on a regular basis. Last year one of my locals sang a song in our recital that I simply adored, and the way she sang it was so gorgeous I wanted to record it myself.  The song was “Was That My Life” by Jo Dee Messina.
 

Well, I loaded the backing track into my recording software and started singing it.
I got 4 measures into the song and realized that this song, though beautiful, with great lyrics and melody, was NOT for me, and I immediately put it away.
 

We can’t always sing the songs we love. But we MUST always sing the songs that love us!!
 

So how do we know when that’s the case?

  • Does it feel comfortable in your body?
  • Does it flow from you with absolutely NO EFFORT?
  • Do the rhythm and melody match your individual expression, in other words…is this song the reason you want to sing?
  • Does it show you off at your very best? Your range…your style?
  • Does it envelope you; surround you with the joy of singing it?

Okay, I hear you, especially you professionals who have to sing a variety of songs on your gigs.
Me too! I get that when a customer yells out a request, you sing it. Gads! I can’t even count how many times a night I hadda sing, “Tie a Yellow Ribbon” back in the day, but when you’re a pro, you just do it. And on a gig, you’ll sing lots of “throw-away” songs. It’s part of the job.

But I would never have recorded that song, or sung it on an audition! Nothing wrong with this song, it’s fine, and fun, but recordings especially MUST be reflections of your core values because the listener cannot see you and therefore can only receive your essence by the songs you are singing and the love you are pouring into them.
 
So, like chocolate cake, you might love a song, but be sure IT LOVES YOU BACK, okay singers? 

PERFORMANCE ATTITUDE 

Watching a tennis tournament recently, I heard the “talking heads” in the booth comment on one player’s lack of aggression on the court, and one of them remarked that this player would probably lose because of this.
 
However, the other reporter felt that the player may be feeling a bit insecure, or tired, or nervous about the “moment” and needed to play “into himself”, and that when he was more comfortable, he’d get more aggressive.
Singers, good singers, even great singers are always nervous when they perform. I get butterflies…almost every performer does.
If I were to open with a song that leads into the highest strong note in my range and I’m nervous, this is definitely going to play in my head, distract me and probably cause me to screw up on that note. Whereas, if I chose a comfortable song, a crowd pleaser but one that puts a smile on my face too, my nervousness would wane, and with more confidence, I’d be able to nail that pesky high note in the next song.
 
You need to “play into yourself” on stage, singers. Performance time is NOT the right time to experiment or to force yourself out of your comfort zone. Use your practice times for that. When you perform, you must think ONLY of communicating with your listeners, be they a crowd of 10,000, or 10, or one!
 
The “ego” will naturally keep pestering you to “SNAP OUT OF IT”, but as long as you sing inside your limits of the moment, they will widen and your confidence will grow with every song you sing.
 

As always, this newsletter will be posted on the SING YOUR LIFE BLOG for your comments and suggestions!
 

‘Til Next time, Singers!
 

Chrys
 

 

 

 

 

CABARET vs. JAZZ

February 2nd, 2009

I must admit, I get little miffed when I hear some Cabaret singers refer  to themselves as Jazz singers. They aren’t. Of course there ARE several…indeed many Jazz artists who do a Cabaret Act…and do it very well.  However the stark differences between these 2 genres are such that it takes a Cabaret singer with a great deal of musicality to sing jazz….And it takes a Jazz singer with a great personality to sing Cabaret!

I read an article in the New York Times about a month ago that the Cabaret scene in NYC and LA is fading due to lack of interest or lack of financial support. Many are blaming the economy, others have different ideas, so I thought I’d weigh in on the issue and, at the same time, flush out this notion that Cabaret and Jazz singing are the same. They are NOT!

According to some Cabaret Singers Yahoo groups, the reason for the decline of the art form in major venues like New York and Los Angeles has a multitude of possible reasons:

  • Accompanists and musicians are charging more, as well as arrangers and conductors,
  • The club owners in both NYC and LA are stealing the singers’ money, refusing to sign contracts in which certain agreements had always been made in the past, i.e. free food and drinks for the night, and otherwise sabotaging the singers’ performances with bad mics, bad amplifiers, and bad lighting.
  • The bad economy…people who enjoy the art form just aren’t going out.

Whatever the root cause, it’s a crying shame!
Cabaret is a unique art form that consists of a singer interacting with his/her audience through songs and patter. There may be an accompanist, or the singer could play for him/herself. There may be a large band or combo, but these musicians are there only to supplement the singer’s performance…as background. The focal point is the singer/performer.

This art form is the epitome of ego-gratification, and I don’t say that disparagingly at all. Cabaret is very gratifying and a true form of self-expression, indeed, some of our most revered performers are masters of this genre. You know them; the story-tellers, the spell-weavers, the ones who keep us in their clutch until they let us go…exactly when they feel it’s right.

Masters of Cabaret performance include legends like

  • Frank Sinatra,
  • Tony Bennett,
  • Liza Minelli, 
  • Elaine Stritch 
  • Barbara Cook,
  • Michael Feinstein, and
  • the impeccable Bobby Short.

These are superior story-tellers, and some of them are also jazz singers, while others are not.  But it’s important to understand that the audiences for Cabaret are interested MAINLY in the story-telling…and the singer, and not so much in the intricacies of the music lines behind his or her vocals. That pleasure is the purvue of Jazz audiences.

However, in either form, the audience must be engaged! The performance must not be self-involved or awkward.

I recall going to hear Jane Monheit with a student of mine a few years ago. What a voice…what technical excellence…what sweet jazz inflections. But as my friend and I were filing out of the theater, we remarked to each other that if we’d only been able to close our eyes for the entire performance, we would’ve enjoyed it much more. As gorgeous as Jane Monheit is, and as glorious as her vocals are, she’s impossible to watch “live”. You just want to stand up and scream, “For God’s sake, Jane, quit tugging on your dress and sing to ME!”

 When Jane Monheit kept checking herself out on stage, she turned her audience off.�

There are Jazz singers who won’t do an entire Cabaret Act because they want it to be all about the music and nothing else. Diana Krall is one of those. Since she also plays the piano in her shows, she doesn’t have to talk too much except to introduce the next tune or a band member to the audience. She’s not exciting, and doesn’t tell stories, but she sings and plays magnificently and understands the collaborative process of a Jazz gig, which is a stark contrast to a Cabaret Act.

In my own opinion, there are performance aspects in both genres, as exemplified by a favorite of mine,  Carol Sloane. She is a perfect example of Jazz and Cabaret. You don’t know about her? Oh Well, here is a singer of jazz who will wrap you around her finger until you weep with joy.

She lets you in, by the songs she sings and tells you stories about growing up on the East Coast that pulls you right into her heart. She’ll sing a chorus or two of a song, and then sit down on the stage with her head down while the instrumentalists are taking their turn…so as not to draw any attention to herself while they’re playing.  And Carol, now in her 60’s, still sounds fantastic! You can check her samples out at iTunes.

Cabaret singers need to understand that the Jazz genre is a team effort. This is hard sometimes for a  some Cabaret artists.  Cabaret is all about the solo singer, and a good many Cabaret artists today have not learned the art of collaboration, so it’s kind of easy to fall into becoming self-involved when every number is about you; all the attention is on you, your technique, your clothing, your mannerisms…and your mistakes. That’s a lot of pressure.

Jazz is much more forgiving that way, where mistakes are heard as unique individual expressions and are even celebrated.
 

Maybe Cabaret could influence a Jazz singer’s performance skills, and Jazz could inform a Cabaret singer’s musicality.

I have spent 50 years singing in posh clubs with 8″ carpets, and in joints with sawdust on the floor…And in all that time, I have learned that when you’re doing a Jazz gig, you play by the rules of that genre, and save your stories for when you do a Cabaret spot.

So, no matter which genre you perform in, singers, make both art forms about the quality of communication to your audience and not just about you.

Here are some Cabaret artists you may wish to check out:

Appearing on iTunes:

  • Deanna Dubbin
  • Karen Akers
  • Bobby Short
  • Michael Feinstein

On their own websites:

I believe that both of these atmospheres allow for long-hidden self expression for a singer, and both genres seem to welcome those of us who are just a few years beyond the age limit for “American Idol”.
And, as I’ve said often, your stage doesn’t need to be at Radio City Music Hall, or the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Your stage can be in your shower, your living room, your community center, your VFW or Elks Hall…just about anywhere!

There are people out there who want to hear you… And I also want to!

I have space available on my singers’ page.  Send me your clips!!  Become one of our featured singers! Click HERE to learn how!

Is the Ego a healthy thing for a singer to have?

January 28th, 2009
Yeah, okay, I already have strong opinions about this, but don’t let that stop you from voicing your own, okay?

I tell my singers, and they will testify to the never-ending diatribes that they have to endure from me, that the ego is the enemy of a true artist…that while you’re up there thinking…

“Look at me, look, LOOK! See me, hear me, pay attention to me ME ME! Oh God, what’s the next line? Should I go for that high note tonight? Do I have the strength? Oh Geez! They’re not even listening….BLAH BLAH BLAH”

…you’re losing them fast!

How can you connect with anyone with all that chatter going on in your head? That’s your ego.

So I tell my students to stay in the present, and just communicate! Tell ‘em a story. Pull ‘em in. Be more interested than interesting.

What do you think? Do you think your ego is who you are? Is that where you get your individualality? Or does the creative part of you come from some other place?
G’head….talk to me. 

 

Measuring the quality of art!

January 28th, 2009

I’ve been watching a lot of tennis this week! And I’ve noticed something interesting that I wanted to share with you.
Clearly one’s athletic prowess can be objectively measured by numbers.
You win! Your ranking goes up, your income goes up, your endorsement opportunities go up, your popularity goes up. It’s all measured by the stats.
It’s like this in almost every sport, and when an athlete, whether a tennis player, baseball player, basketball or whatever, is winning, excelling at his sport…even HE or SHE must admit how good he or she is at it. Isn’t that right? Ask Roger Federer, or Tiger Woods. Neither of these men who say that they are not great at what they do.  

But artistic performance cannot be measured by statistical data, can it? Art is SUBJECTIVE!

Remember Andy Warhol’s painting of a Campbells’s soup can? It was highly successful, but even today, there are numerous people out there who do NOT consider it art, and therefore not worthy of artistic praise. And one may wonder what Andy was thinking at the time.

I point this out because we, as artists each need to get to the bottom of this goodness or badness, this merit or lack thereof of our own performances.
How can we measure something that cannot be scientifically measured? And how can we know when it’s not up to standard without displaying it to a large group? How can we call something bad based on just our own opinion, formed by the doubts and fears we have inside? How do we measure the quality of art in any form?
Oh yes! We have “experts” to tell us what is good art and what is bad or inconsequential, sure! Well, I don’t know about you, but personally I love the movies the critics hate, and I read all the books the book reviewers label as second-rate. Maybe I think that critics are self-imposed experts who don’t know any more, (or any less) than I do, so I can make up my mind.
That’s really the point.
With an art form, the quality of it lies in the receiver, the listener if it’s musical, the viewer if it’s visual, etc.
But rankings?
Isn’t it quite possible for a singer to be at the top of his or her game in poularity and still sound terrible to a lot of people? Of course that’s possible…and occurs frequently.
Whereas, if a baseball player is batting 400+ and has hit a gazillion homers, one CANNOT DENY the quality of that effort, and quite often even the person who’s made it.
Art is subjective…I guess that’s what I’m saying here. If you agree or not, feel free to post your comments here.

Thanks, Singers!

Singers With Musicality

January 28th, 2009

Singers with Musicality 

I was overjoyed and totally delighted when I moved to Corpus Christi from Los Angeles to realize that I hadn’t left everything behind. I knew there were going to be enormous changes that I would have to adjust to, and there have been to be sure. But one thing I still have here in Texas is Ovation TV.

I know it doesn’t sound like much, and if you’ve never had the pleasure of watching this channel, you may not get what it means to me, but let me try and tell you anyway.

If you’re anything like me, and you truly believe in your heart that the salvation of the human race lies in its art, then maybe you can imagine what Ovation TV has to offer. Masterpieces of Art, Film, Literature, Poetry, Opera, Jazz, Singing, Plays, Sculpture, Photography, indeed creation of any and every kind of art imaginable are represented, celebrated and encouraged on this station.

You can watch a play, a symphony orchestra, an opera, a jazz concert on one day, and a film on Dexter Gordon, Charlie Parker, Sylvia Plath or Martha Graham on another day. There is no end to to the glorification of art that goes from morning ’til night on this channel. And it was here that I encountered 30 minutes of this celebration last week on the life and music of Ella Fitzgerald.

Growing up in the canyons of New York City, my sisters and would often go up to the roof to escape the heat during the summer months, and I would always bring my transistor radio along to listen to my favorite station WNEW, where William B. Williams would teach me how to listen to singers, and not just listen…but analyze, appreciate… hear what the horns were doing, the bass lines, everything.

Frank and Ella were “IT” for me and were why I knew from very early on in my lfe, 5 or 6, that it would be my life’s work to sing like those 2.

The short film showing on Ovation took the time to trace the history of Ella’s rise to the top in the recording industry, but went further to explain, why she was adored and respected by her listeners and peers alike. One after another, musicians who had worked with her or just listened to her records, stepped in front of a camera and proudly boasted,

“It was her Musicianship”!

Now, Ella had a fluid, lush, pure, glorious voice, that warmed your heart when you heard it, and also could do anything on earth she wanted it to do, but here were these people saying, “It was her musicianship!”

Several of those interviewed from this film recalled that early on in her career, the bands she auditioned for didn’t really want her. “It wasn’t personal”, one tenor sax player said. “It was that the guys in the band didn’t hold too much respect for girl singers back then…well I guess it’s the same today. You know, girl singers just want to be the center of attention and more often than not, their talent doesn’t deserve that attention. But when Ella sang, not only could you tell instantly that she could hear every chord and every beat we were playing for her, she even made us look for better chords and beats to play just to keep up. She made us all better players!”

There were 2 current jazz singers in the film too, Dee Dee Bridgewater and Anita Wardell, who talked about what it means to sing when you know the music…ALL the music, not just the melody line, and how the whole band knows that you know it, and you know that they know that you now it.

That’s a ride on a magic carpet, singers and it’s woven from the golden thread of the singer’s musicality.

Now you know I’ve talked about this before, singers, and I’ve mentioned with regard to eliciting respect from your fellow musicians, but after watching this film, I realized there was something else…something more I wanted to express to you about musicianship, (or musicality if you prefer), and it’s this.

When you and your accompaniment (whether it’s a full big band or orchestra or YOU playing for yourself) are in total synchronization, the performance is MAGICAL! It infuses YOU and the band and every person sitting in the audience. And believe me, there is no greater satisfaction than singing with a bunch of musicians who are feeling you and playing the best they can to make the whole thing sound wonderful. And you find that singers with musicality don’t worry so much about drawing all the attention from the crowd. They are team players and every body knows it and respects it, just as all those guys respected Ella.

So when I try to encourage you singers to learn an instrument, at least enough of one to understand chordal structure and rhythms, I’m trying to show you that the more musicality you possess, the further you will progress with your singing.

Seriously singers, if you are dead on committed about working as a professional, you’re going to have to have a “live accompaniment”. You cannot rely on backing tracks indefinitely.

It’s Your Job!!

January 28th, 2009

Gads! I can’t believe it’s been an entire month since I lasted posted to my blog! 

To my newsletter readers, so sorry for the delay in posting this article, but I’ve been wrapped up in this Boundless Living Challenge, and it’s having an incredible effect on me. But that’s another article altogether. I’ll be able to tell all the details after the challenge ends on Sept 2.

Meantime, here’s todays article, just a couple of weeks late… 

It’s Your Job!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As mentioned above, I am involved in a project with about 5600 others online. We are each discovering things about ourselves and seeking ways to have an impact on the world we live in. What I am finding out about my self and my motivation is charging my spirit with all sorts of new ideas for the future.  

As I write this, I am acutely aware that some of what I am about to talk about with you guys will be received by you in a variety of ways. Some of you will think, ‘Yeah, she’s right. It’s exactly like that’, while others will disagree totally.

I suspect that most of you will be somewhere in between because as artists we are fairly, if faintly aware of what goes on behind our eyes, and in the deepest part of ourselves, even those parts we keep hidden from the rest of the world outside of us.

That being said, I start by saying that I believe we human beings come into this world each endowed with certain gifts. Some of us discover very early on what those gifts are, and for some of us, they can take a lifetime to reveal themselves. While others may never find them, many will discover their gifts in the latter period of their earthly experience and wonder why it took them so long to see them. 

Well, duh…it takes as long as it takes for each individual rose to blossom. One thing IS certain though, and it is that every one of us DOES have gifts, and from my view, our only job on earth is to use them for good.

I have spoken to you guys about this before and quite often I know, but while I was researching material for the 5th eBook, I came across some quotes by musical artists that truly touched me very deeply.

 

When I tell you people that your gift of song can heal the planet, I’m not just being dramatic. I’m dead serious about that. What’s wrong with the planet is from my perspective really quite simple to diagnose. We are lost! And we are standing at the top of a hill, looking down into a valley, thinking, ‘is that the way…there?’ and suddenly, we hear a small voice, behind us, like a child, and turn to look at it and THAT’s when we see the road back. And the voice was our own…inner child calling us back to LOVE! 

One thing IS certain though, and it is that every one of us DOES have gifts, and from my view, our only job on earth is to use them for good. All we needed to do was turn our heads. But we are so preoccupied with day-2-day survival game we are forced to play on this planet, that we cannot appreciate the value of LOVE, and that’s what music is, you know…LOVE. 

“To sing is to love and affirm, to fly and to soar, to coast into the hearts of people who listen, to tell them that life is to live, that love is there, that nothing is a promise, but that beauty exists, and must be hunted for and found.”
Joan Baez - American Singer/Songwriter 

Do you think that human beings who are feeling that kind of love would be interested in raging wars for profit? 
“When I am singing, I am inside of it…I feel, oh, like it feels when you’re first in love, when you’re touching someone–chills,things slipping all over me…A lot of times, when I get off the stage, I want to make love”
Janis Joplin - American Blues Singer 

Would a CEO feeling like that create a mission statement to lay off a million people just to make a few more dollars? 

“Once I had a dream to live and love, and this dream became music. It touched all of the beautiful experiences I have searched for or known. Each sound was a color, and each color was a warm feeling, and my heart kept the tempo.”
Les McCann - American Jazz Pianist 

Can a person who understands this quote spend his afternoons spreading ugly rumors about his/her neighbor over the backyard fence? 
“The funny thing about enlightenment is that it’s like you’re searching for something–say your hat–and you’re tearing the house apart and suddenly you look in the mirror and you see it sitting on top of your head. Music is where I experience that. I’m in a flow, I’m in a zone, there’s a definite shift in consciousness, without desire, without my ego, without me thinking, ‘oh wow, I’m sounding great’. Just experiencing it as a flowing living moment.”
Vernon Reid - British-American Guitarist 
Can you recall a time in your life when you were so full of joy you wept? Was your ego involved? 
“For a musician, music is the best way to unite with God”. Inayat Khan - Indian Sufi Master
The Runner runs - and it becomes a prayer. For me, singing is my meditation. 

 

“Music is the harmonious voice of creation.An echo of the invisible world [of spirit].”
Giuseppe Mazzini - Italian Patriot and Revolutionary 

Singers - I encourage you to SEE your place in this miraculous creation! 
“He who lets his breath, hence his life force,flow consentingly as a willing sound sacrifice from the depths of his body, sings his life;for singing means to affirm life,to free oneself, and thereby to bring happinessand prosperity to oneself, and consequently to one’s fellow man.”  Marius Schneider 
 

This is the quote that gave me the name of my first website. I have been literally singing my life since I was 3, and there is nothing I cannot endure as long as I keep singing. 

 

 

How can I impress upon you people, the value of your gift for this planet? How can I make you see that your voice + my voice + all the singers’ voices can make so much music, that the entire earth will be continuously singing. 

You can make this happen just by singing your song…making your own “sound sacrifice” to heal the hearts of a lost society. It’s your job….TO SING!
Well, please do forgive my proclivity for phlolisophical discourse, but as Nietzsche once said, 
 

 

“Has anyone ever observed that MUSIC emancipates the spirit? gives wings to thought? and that the more one becomes a musician, the more one is also a philosopher?”

Guilty. 
I leave you with this final thought to ponder, and I invite you to leave your comments. I know you must have some remarks to make about my attempts here to stir things up in you.  

Don’t be shy. There IS a way to leave a comment anonymously, so go for it! 
“Wherein lies the power of songs? Maybe it derives from the sheer strangeness of there being singing in the world…a mystery like mathematics, wine, or love. Song shows the world that it is worthy of our yearning, it shows us our selves as they might be…The mystery holds the key to the unseen…There are occasions when the bolts of the Universe fly open and we are given a glimpse of what is hidden…Glory bursts upon us in such hours, and reveals the radiance of singing.”
Salman Rushdie - British Author 

 

 

See ya, Singers! Sin[g]cerely, 

Chrys