Sunday, August 2, 2020
Music Groups at MIT, Pt. 1
Music Groups at MIT, Pt. 1 [by Jessica Noss 14, Guest Blogger] In high school, I sang in the choir, played oboe in band and full orchestra, and participated in every musical, but I assumed that when I came to MIT, music would play a much smaller role in my life. I was very wrong. When I came to MIT last August, I decided I wanted to be in an instrumental group and a vocal group. I didnt think I had much chance at getting into the Symphony Orchestra (MITSO) or Wind Ensemble (MITWE), and I didnt want to bother preparing an audition piece or go through the torture of auditioning. Luckily, the Concert Band advertised that they would accept everyone, even if youd never played an instrument before but wanted to learn. For singing, there was the Chamber Chorus, the elite group which required a prepared solo for the audition, and there was the Concert Choir, a much larger group which did auditions in groups of 8 with no solos. There were also numerous a capella groups, but they all required prepared solos too. Having had many bad experiences with solo auditions in the past, I decided to just audition for Concert Choir and join Concert Band. At the Convocation during Orientation, the Chorallaries, MITs oldest a capella group, performed MITs Alma Mater, then broke into a rousing Take me back to Tech, one of their classic nerdy MIT songs (the most famous one being the Engineers Drinking Song). I fell in love with them. I knew I didnt stand a chance of getting in, but I desperately wanted to. The Chorallaries singing at the MIT Convocation 2010. I finally decided that if I did enough auditions, I would eventually overcome my nervousness about singing solo. To that end, I went to the Activities Midway (an event where students advertise their groups and ask you to join lots of email lists) and signed up to audition for eight of the nine a capella groups (now, theres a tenth one, the Ohms). I tried to sign up for the ninth one, the Logarhythms, but one of the members stopped me, apologetically informing me that it was a male-only group. After hearing other a capella groups perform, my desperation to join the Chorallaries had turned into a desperation to be in an a capella group. Next, I went to the instrumental music table. When they heard that I was joining Concert Band because I didnt think I was good enough to get into anything by audition, they told me to audition anyway. Despite not having prepared an audition piece, I signed up for MITSO and MITWE auditions. (Later, I had to dig up a piece Id played years before and relearn it.) I also came across the four theatre groups and signed up to audition for a play, a musical, and a pit orchestra. I figured if I was going to make a fool of myself attempting to sing solo and playing a piece I didnt really know, I might as well go all out and do it multiple times. The first day of auditions was the worst. I had scheduled it so that I would have four a capella auditions, all about an hour apart, then the Chorallaries audition. Sure enough, by the time I got to the Chorallaries, I was too tired of auditions to be nervous about singing solo. But my voice also wasnt too happy about the grueling schedule. All the auditions were very casual; most of them did warm-ups to test my range and some sort of pitch-matching or sight-reading exercise, and then I would sing my solo. Over the next week, I auditioned for all the remaining groups. Some of the auditions were kind of awkward. The Cross Products are the Christian a capella group. They asked me what certain quotes from the bible meant to me and whether I agreed with them. I explained that I wasnt religious at all, so most of the quotes didnt mean anything to me, and it didnt really matter to me whether they were true or not. I just wanted to be in a singing group. I also explained that it wouldnt bot her me if I was in the group and we went around spreading Christianity, but I wasnt surprised when they didnt accept me. Eventually, all the audition results came in. Most of them were rejections: Syncopasian (they sing Asian music), Muses (the female group), Cross Products, Toons, Chorallaries, Resonance, Asymptones (youve gotta love these names), and a play. But some groups accepted me. I somehow got into both MITSO and MITWE, and I got into Techiya, the Jewish/Hebrew/Israeli a capella group. Unlike the Cross Products, Techiya isnt a religious group, although it often sings religious music. I also got into both the cast and the pit orchestra for a musical, as well as Concert Choir (but theyll accept almost anyone). Moral of the story? If you really want to be in a music group, or if you tend to get really nervous at auditions, just audition for everything. Chances are youll get into at least one group, and even if it wasnt a group you would normally have considered joining, well, at least youre in something. And if you decide Jewish music isnt your thing, you can always leave at the end of the semester. You can also just try it for a week and then decide. Wonder which music groups I chose and why? Then stay tuned for my next blog!
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