Week One: Taking Stock

Overview

Take stock of your vocal repertoire, evaluate what’s still working, organize your materials, and discover new music to inspire your artistry. This intensive invites you to reflect, share, and connect with fellow singers as you refresh your repertoire toolkit.

VIDEO

Week One: Taking Stock

Monday – Start Your Rep List

Let’s kick things off by getting everything down on paper (or screen). If you already have a repertoire list,

update it and share a screenshot or outline. If you don’t, this is your invitation to start one! Include:

- Title

- Composer

- Language

- Genre (opera, art song, oratorio, etc.)

- Era (Baroque, Romantic, Contemporary…)

 

Tuesday – What’s Working, What’s Not?

Now that you’ve listed everything, take a good look at it. Which pieces are still serving you vocally and

artistically? Which ones feel like old shoes that no longer fit?

Post your keepers and let-go-ers with a few sentences explaining why.

 

Wednesday – Find the Gaps

Zoom out: Is your repertoire balanced? Are you leaning heavily on one language, genre, or era? What’s

missing?

Share what types of pieces you’d like to explore.

 

Thursday – Organize Your Scores

How do you keep your sheet music organized? Share your system—binders, Dropbox folders, notebooks,

whatever works for you. Ask for tips or share your own hacks.

 

Friday – Sing Something That Still Resonates

Pick one piece that still feels like home and post a short video or audio clip. Tell us why it’s stayed in your rotation.

 

Saturday – Community Roundup

Engage with other posts—cheer someone on, recommend a piece, or share a great recording or resource.

 

Sunday – Reflect & Reset

Take a rest day. Scroll, listen, and reflect on what you’ve learned so far.

12 replies

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    • Patricia.1
    • yesterday
    • Reported - view

    I don't have a repertory list, but I share here the list of what I would like to work on and sing the next time I sing in concert.

      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • yesterday
      • Reported - view

       That's a  great idea :) .. that is a beautiful and rather well-balanced program.. no English?? :)

      • Patricia.1
      • yesterday
      • Reported - view

       , I like English pieces too. I once performed this songs of Dowland :

      - Come again

      - Come, heavy sleep

      - Now, o now, I needs must part

      I sang them with a collegue guitarist

      There are some well known like "Flow my tears" that are beautiful

       

      I like Purcell too (If music be the food of love, Strike the viol, Nymphs and shepherds, ...) and Haendel.

       

      I sang "American Lullaby", from Gladys Rich

      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • 16 hrs ago
      • Reported - view

       I'm sure your voice would be amazing in Dowland and Purcell... I've actually never heard of the Gladys Rich piece. Is there a recording that you think is good of that piece? 
      My favorite 20th century English/American composers are Britten, Copland, Barber, Previn and Rorem ðŸ˜„.. always excited to discover someone new!!  

    • Patricia.1
    • yesterday
    • Reported - view

    I like the program of Sunday ! ðŸ˜‰ I hope it will be sunny !

      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • yesterday
      • Reported - view

       Me too!!! 

    • Michelle
    • yesterday
    • Reported - view

    My rep list is pretty short since I'm just starting out:

    • Tantum Ergo, Latin chant, St. Thomas Aquinas
    • O Salutaris Hostia, Latin chant, St. Thomas Aquinas
    • Panis Angelicus, Latin chant, St. Thomas Aquinas (music Louis Lambillotte, SJ) ...are we sensing a theme here?
    • Yesterday for Mass I was asked to sing "O Beauty, Ever Ancient" based on a prayer from St. Augustine, composed by Robert F. O'Conner, SJ 2004, in English (this will probably become a regular part of my church repertoire)
    • Caro mio ben (Italian) from the 24 Italian Arias book
    • The Green Cathedral, English, 2005, Carl Hahn (just beginning this), art song
      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • yesterday
      • Reported - view

       I am sensing a pattern there, too.. You have lots of fun room to explore!! 

    • Patricia.1
    • 23 hrs ago
    • Reported - view

    Tuesday :

    Here are some pieces I'd like to sing but I didn't hold in the program :

    - Chausson "Chanson perpétuelle" : I think this a very beautiful and moving piece, but quite long. As an artist, this not easy to keep the listeners' interest until the end, and I'm afraid of this. I'm also afraid about the low notes in the piece, the manner to manage them. But it would surely be interesting to work on it.

    -Tosti "Chanson de l'adieu" : another very moving text, absolutely beautiful. I would like to sing this song, but I'm afraid perhaps it would be to large for my voice.

    - Tosti "Non t'amo più" : same remarks.

    -Tosti "Ninna nanna" : lovely piece with lovely melody, but a lot of d at the bottom of head voice, and my voice is not very powerful there

    - Bellini "Malinconia, ninfa gentile" in F minor, a little to high for me, I think.

    - Some pieces of Rossini that I feel a little to tricky in the high range, or with a fast tempo, or to large : "La pastorella delle alpi", "Nizza" (song in French), "Il trovatore" (this is a song, not the opera), "Canzonetta spagnuola" (this one is very quick, and in Spanish), "L'invito".

    - Donizetti, "Me voglio fa 'na casa" : I like the melody but I find the text strange...

      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • 15 hrs ago
      • Reported - view

       Tosti!! He's such a treasure trove .. a great alternative to the usual Italian Art Songs and Arias and so may opportunities to build that bel canto technique  (Donizetti and Bellini too, of course) ðŸ˜„

    • Michelle
    • 16 hrs ago
    • Reported - view

    Tuesday: the only piece I'm ready to let go of is Caro mio ben. We've used it in lessons for several months, I've learned A LOT from it, but even though it's enjoyable to sing I think it's time to move on to something with different challenges. I'm super excited to be working on The Green Cathedral with my teacher - I learned the first part of it on my own, but now we're working on it together in lesson. 

    The pieces I sing for church aren't going anywhere, and I still enjoy and get a lot out of singing them.

      • Coffee-drinking soprano, trainer of voices and tonebase voice content lead
      • Heidi_Vass
      • 15 hrs ago
      • Reported - view

       The Green Cathedral is lovely! Excellent choice. Hopefully, you will share that with us at an upcoming recital :) 

Content aside

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