Archive for the ‘Courseware’ Category

Westminster Courseware – Analysis for Success

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Masters students at Westminster Choir College are at a great advantage. Among many other fantastic course offerings which help prepare singers to quickly transition into professional realms, one course at Westminster focuses on the traditional gateway into operatic performance: The Audition.

Laura Brooks Rice’s graduate-level course “Opera Auditions: Preparation and Techniques” offers Voice Pedagogy and Performance majors the opportunity to refine this core element of our craft. Singers explore new repertoire and work to polish their audition presentation.

Ms. Rice brings in top-tier guest artists on a weekly basis to provide feedback. After leaving graduate school, feedback of this type and quality is so difficult (and expensive) to generate.

The course also focuses on process. Few students will leave the class with a flawless package of five arias ready to win The Met Competition. In addition to solving specific issues and making dramatic improvements, the purpose of the course is to teach a process for refinement, so that the singers are properly equipped for the journey ahead.

That is where Velvet Singer Software steps in. Ms. Rice delivers homework assignments that students can accomplish by the use of Velvet Singer. In this way, she leverages their efforts so that they not only learn about the here and now, but they also develop a process for the future.

Rather than creating a list of past auditions and current repertoire, with Velvet Singer the students develop a powerful method and skill set for tracking their auditions and repertoire far into the future.

What power? What is the key benefit?

A large part of the benefit to students occurs during the data entry process. Simply taking the time to make sure all of the boxes are checked makes a giant impact. Being deliberate about journaling what you performed and how you felt is certainly over half the battle. By the time it comes to look back on your journey and plan out where you want to go, you will have a simplified and clearer vision for the future.

Reporting and analysis illuminates what intuition and feedback cannot. The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior. You have to create a clean, objective look into where you have been before you can plan where you are going.

What is your most effective aria?

This report gives students tangible insight in which aria or song has worked the best in the past. “Win” or “Loss” is determined by the status of the audition record. If your audition status is set to “Contract Offered” or “Contract Accepted”, then that audition was a win. In an academic setting, a contract may be to sing a solo with your school choir (at Westminster, that solo may be at Carnegie Hall!) or to perform a role in the opera.

Are your auditions improving?

This report show how many auditions you have been singing over each audition season and whether your outcomes are improving. Auditions take time and energy, so it is not enough for a singer to solely focus on whether or not they have projects to work on. If you are getting work, how much effort did it take for you to generate that work.

Who are you singing for?

There are several ways to analyze who you are singing for and what success you are seeing. This report breaks down your auditions by company budget level. This can be very helpful for those that are starting to target opera young artist programs.

Survey of University / Conservatory Curriculums

Monday, October 25th, 2010

As I have been traveling around to many music schools, I inquire how they handle the business of singing material.

1) A few schools have courses specifically designed for singers, 2) many have entrepreneurship courses designed for all musicians and 3) many are not able to find any room in the curriculum for this material, so they bring in seminars “a la carte.” Some schools have very active and involved career services departments while others handle career preparation more heavily within the vocal department.

That all said, there seem to be some patterns across class syllabus and seminar offerings.

Topics / Seminars

  • Business Plans
  • Finances / Taxes
  • Marketing, Networking
  • Resumes, Materials, Promotions
  • Time Management / Organization / Goals
  • Technology / Websites
  • Mock Auditions
  • Recital Programming / Program Notes
  • Career Options / Brainstorming
  • Artist Management
  • Health / Yoga

Course Materials

Assignments

  • Business Plans
  • Informational Interviews
  • Lists (Professional Contacts, Repertoire, Auditions)
  • Journal Submissions (Auditions, Coachings, Lessons)
  • Reading, Blogs, Research
  • Sample Recital Programs
  • Audition Repertoire Book

I would also suggest the following books for any singer:

Roosevelt: Topics for the Professional Singer

Saturday, October 23rd, 2010

Dana Brown‘s graduate seminar is one of the finest courses of its type across the country. As I travel around to many music schools, I schools I inquire about how they handle this business of singing material. Few have as good of an answer as the Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University.

Dr. Brown developed a two-semester course specifically designed for singers and required for graduation from the Master’s degree program called “Topics for the Professional Singer.” He continues to keep his material on the cutting-edge by involving outside guests and tailoring assignments to the needs of the class.

“Topics for the Professional Singer is a graduate seminar designed to help the aspiring singer make the leap into professional work. Topics are chosen in order to cover the musical, physical, psychological and business aspects of being a professional musician. This course includes teaching by guest artists.”

We were thrilled Roosevelt University decided to directly involve Velvet Singer Software into their curriculum as required “Courseware” purchased through the school bookstore. With this relationship, we are able to accomplish so much in such a quick amount of time. This represents a huge victory for the singers.

  • Now we can reach those students that might otherwise not engage with this material. Organization and planning is for everyone — especially for those that are naturally less gung-ho.
  • We can “teach a man to fish.” Dr. Brown’s assignments now come alive. Rather than asking only singers to prepare a repertoire list, we also leave the students with a dynamic and powerful skill set to keep their repertoire list updated throughout their careers!
  • We are able to introduce new high-technology elements into the curriculum. It is not a paper world anymore and Velvet Singer Courseware helps schools take the leap.

Powerful Homework Assignment

With Velvet Singer Courseware, we were able to create a homework assignment including submission of these five reports:

  1. Professional Contacts
  2. Repertoire summarized by Repertoire Type and Status
  3. Audition Selections summarized by Season
  4. Career Journal submissions
  5. Coaching, Lesson and Practice Session Journal submissions

The students truly rose to the challenge and impressed their teacher by submitting far more than the minimum requirements of this assignment. This course (with the help of Velvet Singer Courseware) is one of the most important steps toward organizing and empowering these budding careers!