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Beyond choir singing: exploring solo repertoire

Singing in a choir introduces thousands of people to wonderful music and provides friendship, structure and the pleasure of making music together. Many singers spend a lifetime enjoying exactly that. There is something deeply satisfying about being part of a larger sound, contributing your own voice to something that no one person could create alone.

But what if you find yourself wanting a little more?

Not more commitment. Not necessarily more performing. Just a deeper involvement, a discovery from within the music itself - and the workings of and connection with your own voice.

I think this is one of the reasons singing workshops, summer schools, and study weekends continue to hold such appeal. They create opportunities to step a little closer to the repertoire we love. To spend time with music in a different way. To listen. To observe. To have a go.

I have sat in enough workshop rooms to know that some of the most memorable moments happen when a singer decides to take that step. ...

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How to Build a Consistent Singing Practice: Real Support for Adult Classical Singers

Most adult classical singers aspire to a sense of genuine progress. Not perfection. Not pressure. Just a sense that their voice is growing, supported, and part of a rhythm they can trust.

But building a consistent practice is rarely about willpower or doing more. If it were, far more singers would feel confident in their progress. What people really need is a way of working that fits the reality of their lives.

After many years of running workshops, weekends, teaching sessions and in-person events, I see the same pattern again and again: a regular singing practice grows from a foundation of rhythm, clarity, and support.

A rhythm that feels workable

A good singing rhythm is not rigid. It does not require singing every day or following a strict routine. It has to match your life and energy. When you find a rhythm you can return to week after week, your practice becomes realistic rather than idealistic. That is when consistency begins.

Learning needs time

Singing develops through at...

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