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Get
Out of the Shower and Get On Stage!
Learn to Sing With Choir of the Year and Making Music
Sing Away The January Blues, Start The Year on
a High Note and Reap the Health Benefits of Singing
Scunthorpe based choir beats almost
200 others to become best amateur choir in the UK
Learn to sing for FREE in 2010, unlock your inner diva,
banish the January Blues, get fit and de-stress through
the power of your voice at Learn to Sing, a unique series
of singing coaching sessions run by Making Music, the
umbrella organisation for voluntary music and Choir
of the Year, the UK's largest amateur choral competition.
Each course concludes with the opportunity for singers
to perform live on stage in front of a packed audience
at a regional Choir of the Year event.
Learn to Sing, supported by the National Lottery through
Arts Council England, takes place in seven major cities
across England from 26 January 2010 [details below].
Learn to Sing is open to anyone of any ability, from
total novice to shower soprano and karaoke enthusiast.
Each Learn to Sing course lasts for six weeks (one evening
a week) and is hosted by a skilled choir and led by
a team of specially trained vocal coaches from the British
Association of Barbershop Singers (BABS).
Participants will be taught the basics of singing, including
how to look after the voice and sing in harmony through
to performance skills and rhythm and voice development
across a range of different styles of music from rock
and pop through to the classics. Participants will not
only learn to sing with confidence and discover the
joy of group singing, but also secure the huge health
benefits that singing provides and meet new people.
Interested participants can find out more: www.makingmusic.org.uk/learntosing.
Choir of the Year provides Learn to Sing participants
with the opportunity to perform live on stage and see,
meet and learn from the very best vocal groups in the
country, raising their aspirations and showcasing the
range of singing opportunities on offer. Over 200 singing
groups of all ages and styles are involved in Choir
of the Year 2010, performing at public regional and
national heats across the UK for a place in the Grand
Final at London's Royal Festival Hall on 28 November,
broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and BBC FOUR.
Learn to Sing 2010, courses. Full details of all on
www.makingmusic.org.uk/learntosing:
Newcastle,
with the Tynemouth Choral Society starting from 15 February
Manchester,
with the St George's Singers, Stockport starting from
26 January
Warwick,
with the Leicester Philharmonic Choir starting from
29 March
Manchester,
with the Salford Choral Society starting from 27 January
Basingstoke,
with the Wokingham Choral Society starting from 11 March
Bristol,
with The Great Western Chorus and Avonbelles starting
from 3 February
Milton
Keynes, with the Welwyn Garden City Music Society
starting from 8 February
Sing yourself fit
January is the perfect time to start learning to sing,
as singing and has significant physical health and wellbeing
benefits, helping New Year goals become a reality. Professor
Graham Welch, Chair of the International Music Education
Research Centre at the University of London summaries
why people who sing are healthier than those who don't:
- Singing releases endorphins into your system and
makes you feel energized and uplifted. Singing gives
the lungs a workout.
- Singing tones abdominal and intercostal muscles
and the diaphragm, and stimulates circulation.
- Singing makes us breathe more deeply than many forms
of strenuous exercise, so we take in more oxygen,
improve aerobic capacity and experience a release
of muscle tension as well.
The longer-term health benefits of singing regularly
are well-established and include the offset of dementia
and Alzheimer's disease. Greg Cohen of George Washington
University tracked a Senior Singers Chorale in Arlington,
Virginia and found that the singers suffered less depression,
made fewer doctor visits a year and took fewer medications
compared with non-singers.
Robin Osterley, Chief Executive, Making Music
said: "We are passionate about helping people
discover the joy of singing and the associated health
and wider benefits it provides. We're committed to helping
develop new singers of all sorts and all ages. With
the great support of Arts Council England and extra
benefit of Choir of the Year's involvement, Learn to
Sign 2010 will enable hundreds of people to get into
signing, and for singing to become part of the lives.
Helen Price, Education Manager, Choir of the
Year said: "The popularity of TV talent
contests demonstrates that we're a nation of would-be
singers, but people don't always make the leap from
singing in the shower to singing in a group! For 25
years Choir of the Year has been at the forefront of
developing and showcasing the very best group singing
in the country and the sense of fun and achievement
that comes through live performance. Today group singing
is the most popular team pastime after sport in Britain.
We're delighted to be involved in Learn to Sing and
help people discover a passion for singing and look
forward to hearing the singers perform at their regional
Choir of the Year event in 2010."
END
Press information
For press information about Learn to Sing please contact
Will Kallaway
020 7221 7883
william.kallaway@kallaway.com
For general information about Choir of the Year please
contact
Helen Price
helen@choiroftheyear.com
020 7313 6273
For general information about Making Music please contact
Sarah Robinson
sarah.robinson@makingmusic.org.uk
0207 422 8280
About Choir of the Year (www.choiroftheyear.com)
Choir of the Year is the UK's national amateur group
singing competition and the foremost competition of
its kind - winning the competition is the ultimate achievement
for any UK choir.
Over 200 choirs of all ages and music styles will be
performing at regional heats at major venues across
the UK from February to June 2010. These events are
FREE for the public to attend, but tickets go quickly!
The choirs are singing to win a place in the Grand Final
at the Royal Festival Hall on 28 November, broadcast
on BBC Radio 3 and BBC FOUR. Competing choirs receive
live feedback from esteemed judges at each event. Tickets
for all performances can be booked by emailing info@choiroftheyear.com.
Since 1984 more than 130,000 singers of all ages have
taken part in Choir of the Year, a biennial festival
of singing, performing in a vast array of styles - pop,
gospel, barbershop, classical and World music. It is
FREE to enter and choirs get to perform to a live audience
and have expert judges provide live feedback and written
guidance notes following the heat. Choir of the Year
is more than a competition and helps choirs to become
the best they can, providing the opportunity for singers
of all ages and backgrounds to meet and exchange ideas,
it raises the aspirations of thousands of singers by
promoting teamwork, dedication and a passion for singing.
About Making Music
Making Music, the National Federation of Music Societies,
is one of the largest arts umbrella organisations in
the UK, representing and supporting over 2,750 voluntary
music groups. Its members include choirs, orchestras,
music promoters, jazz and wind bands, community festivals,
samba groups, sitar ensembles, barbershop choruses and
brass bands. It provides a comprehensive range of financial,
artistic and administrative services, as well as development
and training opportunities to member groups. Making
Music also lobbies on behalf of its members to national
and local government and other agencies. Collectively,
Making Music's 200,000 musicians and music lovers present
around 10,000 concerts each year to an audience of 1.6
million people.
About The British Association of Barbershop Singers
The British Association of Barbershop Singers (BABS)
is a registered music charity whose aim is to encourage
harmony singing across all age groups. The Association
is a voluntary organisation that has built an enviable
reputation for the high quality of education and training
it offers and currently has 60 registered barbershop
choirs and 90 registered barbershop quartets. There
are 6,000 people singing barbershop harmony in the UK
with over 100,000 worldwide. Further information on
barbershop singing can be found at www.singbarbershop.com
Learn to Sing and Choir of the Year 2010 are supported
by the National Lottery through Arts Council England.
To find out more about the Arts Council please visit
www.artscouncil.org.uk
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