• Latest
  • Trending
The Paul R. Judy Center for Innovation and Research Announces Grant Recipients

Walking the Dog, and Singing Louder

September 19, 2022

Headlines December 2025

December 10, 2025

Turn Rejection Into Success

December 10, 2025

Full Plate? Slow Down to Show Up

December 10, 2025

Tuning Ritual for Jazz Band

December 8, 2025

Why You Matter

December 8, 2025
2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

December 1, 2025
Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

November 29, 2025
Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

November 28, 2025
New Products November 2025

New Products November 2025

November 26, 2025
Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

November 25, 2025
Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

November 25, 2025
Three Characteristics of Leadership – Lessons for Music Teachers

Three Characteristics of Leadership – Lessons for Music Teachers

November 21, 2025
Sunday, December 14, 2025
SBO+
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

Walking the Dog, and Singing Louder

bySBO Staff
September 19, 2022
in Archives, The Practical Conductor, Choral
0
The Paul R. Judy Center for Innovation and Research Announces Grant Recipients
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement
ETI Nashville Giveaway

I used to have a dog. His name was Marcus, and he was a black miniature schnauzer (that’s his picture). Marcus and I got into the habit of taking long walks when he was younger, and during those walks I listened to a lot of things – podcasts, radio shows, and music on which my choirs were working. My a cappella group, Eleventh Hour, was allowed to suggest songs for consideration in our set. I loaded all those suggestions into a playlist, and when I walked Marcus, I would listen — with one goal in mind — musical intimacy.

I set the playlist so that each song would play on repeat. At the start of the dog-walk, I’d start listening to a song over and over again. If I liked the song enough that I could listen to it on repeat through the ENTIRE dog-walk, it would move into serious consideration for arrangement.

I have often stressed to my a cappella groups/choirs that if they are performing a piece of music, they need to be intimately familiar with the end product. There’s so much to be learned from listening to a polished, professional performance of the piece you are preparing. Since everyone is busy, I now suggest that my singers do what I did: build a playlist of the material on which you are working and listen to it over and over. On dog-walks. In the car. While doing homework. In the shower. I don’t care when or how or where, just listen to it a lot, on repeat.

ADVERTISEMENT

And listen for more understanding each time. Go deep.

Advertisement
TI:ME and Midwest Clinic

Form, style, dynamics, tuning, diction, rhythm, balance, and so much more become obvious when one is familiar with the polished end product. Architects not only create blueprints, but renderings of the final project so that everyone involved can see what they are building. Cookbooks contain photos of completed dishes… nailed it!

As musicians, we must become intimate with the music we are striving to create, so we know best how to direct our practice efforts. When we are intimate with the music we are striving to perform, errors of execution are much easier to spot in the crucial early stages of learning.

Like many, I struggle with trying to get my less-experienced singers to SING OUT. So many of them sing like they talk, without engaging any of the many muscles that must work in coordination to create a vibrant, healthy tone.

Today was another day of “that’s good, but could you please sing louder?” Desperate to try another angle, I realized: “I am directing from an iPad. I’m going to hit the app store and get a decibel meter.”

I downloaded a free decibel meter app, and as soon as it loaded, it was air-played to the smart board for all to see. “This is a decibel meter,” I said. “A decibel is a measurement of loudness. This app will show us how loudly we are singing.”

ADVERTISEMENT

In order to get everyone to understand the baseline of sound, I let the meter run and we explored the following sound levels:

ADVERTISEMENT
  • A quiet room
  • Me singing alone
  • Me singing loudly
  • The choir singing a scale together with piano
  • The choir singing a scale together without piano
  • The choir singing a scale together loudly without piano
  • The sopranos, boys, altos each singing a scale individually without piano

As they saw the decibel meter in action, they started tracking numbers, and soon a sense of competition filled the room. Who wants to be the section that is “last” on the decibel meter ranking? No one.

The result was that the singers WERE singing out, WERE singing louder. We all know that louder does not equal better, but I believe that singers must sing out before they can sing better. It’s like shooting a basketball – it has to get above the rim before we can worry about aiming the ball through the hoop!

Using a decibel meter isn’t the answer to all under-singing problems, but it’s one tool I found to be very effective in my rehearsal today. The saying holds true: Improvement doesn’t come from what’s EXPECTED, but what’s INSPECTED.

Here’s a link to several decibel meter apps, both iOS and android, free and paid: https://bit.ly/2Bpjf0k

Brody McDonald is the director of choirs at Kettering Fairmont High School. Under his leadership, his curricular choirs have consistently earned the highest ratings at state level contest and have been featured at numerous conventions. He is at the forefront of the a cappella movement, serving as a founding member and the vice president of the A Cappella Education Association. His a cappella ensemble, Eleventh Hour, was the first high school group ever to compete on NBC’s The Sing-Off. Brody is also the author of A Cappella Pop: A Complete Guide to Contemporary A Cappella Singing. Brody has recently joined the faculty at Wright State University as director of a cappella studies and has partnered with Deke Sharon to launch Camp A Cappella, an a cappella summer camp.

Advertisement
Bob Rogers Travel

You may also like:

Default ThumbnailRoundtable: Making A Cappella Work with University Vocal Programs An A Capella Talk with Deke Sharon Classroom: Everything I Need to Know About Teaching I Learned from My Dog Default ThumbnailA Cappella Group Checklist So How Do I Learn More?
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Bid Should Be a Four-Letter Word

Next Post

Barbershop Harmony Society

Next Post
DSO to Celebrate 43rd Annual ‘Classical Roots’ Concert and Celebration

Leslie Odom, Jr. Will Perform with The Detroit Symphony Orchestra 

Please login to join discussion
ADVERTISEMENT
  • December 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • November 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • October 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • September 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • August 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2025 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114

Advertisement
Wenger Endur Music Stand