Nova Scotia Youth Choir 2017 Staff Announced

Nova Scotia Youth Choir Logo

We are excited to announce 2017 will be Rachel Rensink-Hoff will be joining us as Guest Conductor for NSYC 2017 and Christina Murray  will join Ross Thompson as a Resident Conductor.  Audition Registrations for the 2017 choir will soon be announced.  Dates can be found on the NSYC page of the NSCF website.

The rehearsals for the tour weekend will take place in HRM this year and the concert weekend will once again feature a three concert tour!

 

Dr. Rachel Rensink-Hoff

Dr. Rachel Rensink-Hoff is Assistant Professor of music and director of choirs at McMaster University, where she teaches courses in conducting, vocal-choral pedagogy and music education. She is condin-selecteductor of the McMaster University Choir and founding conductor of both the Women’s Choir and Chamber Choir. Prior to her appointment at McMaster, she taught at The University of Western Ontario where she completed both her Doctora
te in Music and Masters in Choral Conducting, with additional choral studies at the Eastman School of Music Conducting Institute, the Voice Care Network of St. Johns University, Minnesota, and the University of Toronto. She has engaged in masterclasses under conductors Anton Armstrong, Helmuth Rilling, Joseph Flummerfelt, Dale Warland and the late Sir David Willcocks.

Past-President of Choirs Ontario and Vice-President of Programming for Choral Canada, Rachel is the 2014 winner of the prestigious Leslie Bell Prize for Choral Conducting awarded by the Ontario Arts Council. Under her direction, the McMaster choral program has steadily gained recognition in the Hamilton arts community and beyond for its inspired performances. In 2015, her McMaster Women’s Choir was awarded first prize in the 2015 National Canadian Choral Competition for Amateur Choirs of the CBC and Choral Canada. That same year she was also nominated for the Excellence in Teaching Award at McMaster University. An active member of the McMaster Institute of Music and the Mind, her current areas of research include conducting gesture, empathy through singing, and Canadian choral music. She publishes regularly in the Choral Journal of the American Choral Directors’ Association as well as in Choral Canada’s Anacrusis and The Canadian Music Educator. She works frequently as guest conductor, adjudicator, conference presenter and workshop clinician. In March of 2017 she presents a session on the works of Canada’s female choral composers at the National Conference of the American Choral Director’s Association.

 

Christina Murray

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Christina Murray is a choral conductor and vocal pedagogue based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She approaches her conducting practice through the voice and is widely known for her award-winning and innovative work as artistic director of Xara Choral Theatre Ensemble. She is also the director of the Dalhousie University Chorus and conducts the Bay Chorale, a joyful community choir in the Peggy’s Cove area.

Christina holds an honours undergraduate degree in music (voice/conducting) and philosophy from Mount Allison University, has done graduate work in feminist liturgical practices, and has subsequently studied conducting with Diane Loomer, Jon Washburn, Michael Zaugg, and Elise Bradley. Also an active and accomplished choral singer, as a young person she was selected for two tours with the National Youth Choir of Canada and she now sings with the Canadian Chamber Choir.

Christina served as head of choral studies at Kodaikanal International School in South India from 2002-2004 and was resident conductor of the Nova Scotia Youth Choir in 2005 and 2006. Today, she lives in Boutilier’s Point with her spouse, her baby son, Phinean, and their two dogs.

Divine Providence: ScotianAires Make Their Mark at International Competition

Competing against 23 other choruses from across North America, the ScotianAires placed 12th, winning the Montreal City Voices Tait Trophy for the chorus which had improved the most over the previous year. The result was a testament to the dedication, commitment and hard work of all the chorus members, as well as Director Sue Kember, Assistant Directors Adele Merritt and Cathy Hunter and coaches Debra Lynn, Ray Johnson and Theresa Weatherbee. It was also a good year for the ScotianAires’ quartet, Tonic!, who placed 11th in a tough field of 36 quartets and earned the opportunity to perform as microphone testers in the quartet finals. Now that IC&C 2016 is over, the ScotianAires can begin preparing for next year’s event; but travel won’t be part of the equation. IC&C 2017 will take place right here in Halifax, allowing barbershop singers from far and wide to experience the hospitality for which Nova Scotians are famous.

 

Teleconference with Canada Council – New Arts Funding Model

15036473_1431829796834665_8362501559464751117_nHave questions about the new Canada Council for the Arts funding model and how to prepare your choir or yourself as a choral artist or manager? Choral Canada – Canada Choral is providing its members with the opportunity to connect directly by teleconference with Council on Nov. 18th, 2pm ET. You need to REGISTER by Nov.16th, 5pm ET. Click here for more details:
http://www.choralcanada.org/teleconference-with-council-teleconference-avec-le-conseil/

The Cultural Federations of Nova Scotia and The Nova Scotia Choral Federation – 40th Anniversary Open House!

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The Nova Scotia Choral Federation invites all members and friends to help us celebrate our 40th Anniversary along with our friends and neighbours at the Culture Federations of Nova Scotia on Wednesday, November 30, 2017 from 5-7 pm.

Kick off the Holiday Season and enjoy an early evening of camaraderie, refreshments (cash bar) and finger foods.  Please RSVP to cfns@eastlink.ca and tim@nscf.ns.ca

The National Choral Census Needs You

IT IS FINALLY TIME! The National Choral Census is kicking off! We are SO excited to have this momentous and important project beginning next month! We have uchoirs-make-censussed the feedback from our choral community across the country to design a census that will give us information they asked for, and to create a true pi
cture of what choral music making looks like in Canada.
Now, the important bit – WE NEED VOLUNTEERS ASAP!

One part of the census is a short phone/email survey designed by our research company Hill Strategies Research Inc. and the Choral Canada Advocacy Committee and we need volunteers to make these calls. We are looking for 4-6 volunteers from each province and territory to call a list of randomly selected numbers in your region of the country, and ask a few simple questions about singing and involvement in choir to the person on the other end. These calls need to take place during a three-week window of November 8-30. You can divide up your time however you would like. Some of the calls will need to be made during the day when schools/businesses are open. Hill Strategies are approximating 6 hours per volunteer.

The first week of November volunteers will be contacted with all the detailed information they will need to know – a training document, a phone/email script, an excel spreadsheet for recording results and a list of people/organizations to contact. This can all be done in their own time, on their own phone, from the comfort of their own home. They just need a phone, and a computer/internet to do the data recording/sending of the information.

If you are interested, please contact me, Heather Fraser at hrfraser@gmail.com IMMEDIATELY or by October 27th. If you can’t help out yourself, please help us out by forwarding this message to your choirs, friends, other singers, … anyone you think might be willing to help us out! Time is of the essence!

You will be doing a great service to your choral community, at home and across the country! Many heartfelt thanks and we hope to hear from you soon!

Heather Fraser
Artistic Director, Annapolis Valley Honour Choirs
Program Director, Nova Scotia Choral Federation
Member of Advocacy Committee, Choral Canada