Category Archives: News

Colloquium XXIV Highlights: Dr. MeeAe Cecilia Nam


Private vocal coaching with Dr. MeeAe Cecilia Nam 
will be made available at the Colloquium for the first time at a CMAA Colloquium. If you have wanted to study with a truly gifted vocal teacher, this is your opportunity.

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For several years,  Dr. Nam has been on the faculty of the CMAA Colloquium, sharing her expertise in vocal pedagogy, vocal performance and directing techniques. She has also served as a plenary speaker

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Colloquium XXIV Highlights: Organist Simon Thomas Jacobs

simonthomasjacobsAs part of Colloquium XXIV, we are thrilled to announce this year’s organ recitalist who will present a program of music showcasing all the Indianapolis Christ Church Cathedral’s organs.

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Get Graduate Credit for Colloquium or Chant Intensive

Did you know you can receive graduate credit through Duquesne University’s summer music program for participating in the 2014 Sacred Music Colloquium or summer Chant Intensive?

See the complete listing of all Duquesne’s summer program’s credit courses here.

  • Details on credit for the summer Chant Intensive, taking place June 9 through 12 at Duquesne in Pittsburgh
  • Details on credit for the 2014 Colloquium, set for June 30 through July 6 in Indianapolis

Get complete details on the summer Chant Intensive. Registration ends May 1.

Get complete details on the Colloquium. Early-bird registration (with significant price discount) ends March 31.

 

Chant Intensive… What will you learn?

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Perhaps you are wondering why you should attend a Chant Intensive course.

Here is the goal of the course:

To develop the theoretical and practical skills necessary for Gregorian chant performance. As a participant in the Chant Intensive course, you will understand basic Gregorian chant theory according to the Solesmes and other methods, and be able to transfer this knowledge from the written page to live performance as a singer or conductor in liturgy.

This course is where you can learn how to be an effective singer and/or conductor of chant for your own program wherever you live. Since Vatican II, it is not so easy to find a chant expert in your hometown. Learning the finer points of singing and/or directing chant is a lonely goal if you don’t happen to be lucky enough to have a teacher near you. This course allows you to gain the knowledge you need to either sing in a schola or start your own chant group as a director. Whether you just want to be able to sing the new English Missal chants effectively or you want to work toward the goal of singing the Latin propers from the Graduale, this course is for you.

While offering much information about the theoretical concepts, the course is geared toward live performance of chant. You will learn:

1. Reading the four-­line staff ● Clefs ● Principles of Solfege ● Basic Neumes ● More complex neumes ● Bar lines

2. Introduction to Chant Rhythm ● Solesmes Method­ history and application ● Principles of Arsis and Thesis ● The Ictus ● Counting ● Alternative approaches ­ Semiology overview

3. The Gregorian Modes ● Basic Modal structure: Finals, Dominants, Ranges ● The Major Modes ● The Minor Modes

4. Mass Ordinaries ● The Kyriale ● Mass settings in English

5. Mass Propers ● The Gregorian Propers ● English Alternatives

6. The Art of Psalmody ● Antiphonal singing ● Pointing the Psalms

7. Chant Hymns ● Singing the Divine Office

8. Mass preparation for June 12, 2014 (Duquesne University Chapel, 5:00pm) ● Ordinary of the Mass (Mass TBD) ● Propers for the Solemnity of Pentecost

Textbooks include the Gregorian Missal (Solesmes) and the Parish Book of Chant (CMAA).

If you have put off making the trip to take this course in the past, make this the year for intensively studying chant. Registration for Summer Chant Intensive is still open, so register today. The dates for this year’s Summer Chant Intensive are June 9-12, 2014. The course will be held again at Duquesne University, in Pittsburgh. For more information about the instructors and details regarding registration, visit this page.

Details about college credit through Duquesne University’s music department are available here. If you have other questions, write to us.

 

Colloquium Scholarship funds needed…

 “… One of my life goals is to help the Church bring back the beautiful musical gems of the past in order to aid worship at Holy Mass. I’m hoping to serve the Church throughout my life by composing lots of new music and by playing solo Bach and other sacred music at Mass. I would really like to attend the colloquium this summer in order to gain a better understanding of the rich musical tradition of the Church so that I can add to it in a more meaningful way. I am asking for a scholarship because, as a student, I have very limited resources and would not otherwise be able to attend. Thank you so much for consideration and God bless you!”

 

There have been many requests just like this one for scholarship aid this year.  The CMAA needs donations to allow us to give scholarships to applicants like this one to the Sacred Music Colloquium this year in Indianapolis. There are many more people who would like to come, but do not have the funds.

Registration for the Colloquium is still open.  If there is some way you can make a donation to the cause, be it $10 or $500, your generosity will be much rewarded:  with renewed hope, beautiful liturgy, and a more promising future for sacred music.

Write to us if you can help, or make a donation to colloquium@musicasacra.com through Pay Pal.   No gift is too small.  All donations are tax deductible.



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