Dear teachers,
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@Sci_Fi_FanGirl mostly, it's not even about pitch, just about having two roughly equal-sized groups (for call-and-response or singing in canon). Young kids' voices won't be that different anyway.
@quidcumque @Sci_Fi_FanGirl isn't that a situation for the good old left and right hand group. Or if they are too young, the window and door group?
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@irina I also think there not that much systematic difference before puberty, is there?
@quidcumque @EdtheChem AMAB kids might have slightly more range, but it's probably not even a statistically significant difference.
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@irina @quidcumque I've been steadily moving up in the world, tone-wise. Was an alto from school, but went to sop 1 after doing the mezzo parts for a while. Singing teacher says 100% a sop, life was a lie

@noodlemaz @quidcumque I have a decent high register but can't keep it up for long (if I have to sing a whole liturgy, hour and a half, at mezzo pitch, I'm *exhausted*, also because most of it is right on a bad register break)
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@quidcumque @Sci_Fi_FanGirl isn't that a situation for the good old left and right hand group. Or if they are too young, the window and door group?
@Zahlenzauberin Canon singing, yes, won't work if you're rehearsing call-and-response things where each group has different lyrics and might not stand in the same place every time. But even then, you can just have the whole group learn the whole song - it's fun to sing different parts of it!
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Dear teachers,
Please STOP IT with the "all girls sing this part, all boys sing that part of the song".
You have trans and nonbinary kids in your classes. Yes, you really do. Not all of them want to be out to you or their classmates. Not all of them feel comfortable with just picking a category at random; not all of them feel comfortable with just being quiet.
And they shouldn't have to.
Just find better categories. PLEASE.
Like soprano, second soprano, alto, tenor, baritone, bass? They usually dont say it by gender. Never experienced that gender specific call in choir. I was alto.
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Like soprano, second soprano, alto, tenor, baritone, bass? They usually dont say it by gender. Never experienced that gender specific call in choir. I was alto.
And with young kids I'm guessing the solution is to not pick songs like that cause I remember we didnt sing songs like that.
We sang Sakura, the japanese folk song we sang in English and Japanese. Tingalayo which is from the Caribbean islands but we sang it in English and Spanish. We had this one song where it was left side and right side. And it was Jambo-Hello translated into a lot more languages. XD it was a THING to do multilingual songs for choir!
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@quidcumque @EdtheChem AMAB kids might have slightly more range, but it's probably not even a statistically significant difference.
@irina @quidcumque sounds about right, but exceptions happen and everyone changes at different times. Those who sing elsewhere as well could maintain larger ranges even then. Injuries and illnesses may also force sudden and/or permanent changes.
Best approach is matching individuals to vocal parts more on the basis of their voice and less on their… well… parts.
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Dear teachers,
Please STOP IT with the "all girls sing this part, all boys sing that part of the song".
You have trans and nonbinary kids in your classes. Yes, you really do. Not all of them want to be out to you or their classmates. Not all of them feel comfortable with just picking a category at random; not all of them feel comfortable with just being quiet.
And they shouldn't have to.
Just find better categories. PLEASE.
@quidcumque my cousin have a wedding in a few month and there is a dress code "women wear red, men wear blue (not jeans)" and I'm tempted to just cancel
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@quidcumque my cousin have a wedding in a few month and there is a dress code "women wear red, men wear blue (not jeans)" and I'm tempted to just cancel
@gkrnours agender me would have the options of "yeah, I'll wear black
" and cancel, I guess. Gah. -
And with young kids I'm guessing the solution is to not pick songs like that cause I remember we didnt sing songs like that.
We sang Sakura, the japanese folk song we sang in English and Japanese. Tingalayo which is from the Caribbean islands but we sang it in English and Spanish. We had this one song where it was left side and right side. And it was Jambo-Hello translated into a lot more languages. XD it was a THING to do multilingual songs for choir!
@Energetic_Nova I also remember singing multilingual songs in elementary school, and people adding verses in languages they knew!
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@irina @quidcumque sounds about right, but exceptions happen and everyone changes at different times. Those who sing elsewhere as well could maintain larger ranges even then. Injuries and illnesses may also force sudden and/or permanent changes.
Best approach is matching individuals to vocal parts more on the basis of their voice and less on their… well… parts.
@EdtheChem @quidcumque Of course people should be matched to parts on the basis of their voice! At least if you want (a) everybody to enjoy singing and (b) the music to sound somewhat decent. And (a) is vastly more important than (b), especially when it's children singing.
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@EdtheChem @quidcumque Of course people should be matched to parts on the basis of their voice! At least if you want (a) everybody to enjoy singing and (b) the music to sound somewhat decent. And (a) is vastly more important than (b), especially when it's children singing.
@irina @quidcumque Too true: lose the enthusiasm and their best voice will never come.
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S svenja@mstdn.games shared this topic
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Dear teachers,
Please STOP IT with the "all girls sing this part, all boys sing that part of the song".
You have trans and nonbinary kids in your classes. Yes, you really do. Not all of them want to be out to you or their classmates. Not all of them feel comfortable with just picking a category at random; not all of them feel comfortable with just being quiet.
And they shouldn't have to.
Just find better categories. PLEASE.
@quidcumque I agree with what others have suggested, left or right groups for younger kids, high or low voices for older groups. And remember some very good singers can do both high and low, so they could equally choose depending on the song or the day.
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N necrosis@chaos.social shared this topic