It takes awhile before I clue in. But yeah, those lyrics are familiar, even the swagger of the singers. Could members of the acclaimed ±«Óătv Chamber Choir really be wrapping their tongues around Beyonceâs Single Ladies?
Cause if you liked it then you should have put a ring on it/If you liked it then you shoulda put a ring on it/Donât be mad once you see that he want it âŠ
Sung in bombastic, operatic style, the song is performed like an argument between the sexesâthe womenâs voices sweet and high, the menâs like low thunder. Single Ladies is a far cry from the choirâs usual classical choral repertoire.
âIt started as a bit of a joke,â explains Maria Murphy, a fourth-year music student majoring in voice. âWeâve got this pop concert coming up and we were throwing around crazy song titles when Single Ladies came up. We didnât actually think heâd do it.â
âHeâ is Gary Ewer, director of the ±«Óătv Chamber Choir. He arranged the song âas if Schubert or Brahms had composed it,â he explains, during a break in rehearsals. âWeâre having a bit of fun; itâs presented as a spoof.â
|
The next concert, Body & Soul, will be performed on both sides of Halifax Harbour: at St. Andrewâs United Church in Halifax on Friday, March 19 and at Grace United Church in Dartmouth on Saturday, March 20. Besides Single Ladies, other songs on the program include Light My Fire by The Doors, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes, A Groovy Kind of Love and an arrangement of the Mika song Any Other World by student composer Michael Robson.
âThese students are such good vocalists that you can expect a high level of performance from them,â says Mr. Ewer, who teaches aural perception and music theory at ±«Óătv. He also directs the ±«Óătv Coro Collegium, a much larger choral ensemble comprised of students and community singers. âItâs such a pleasure working with them.â
The respect is mutual. âHeâs pretty enthusiastic. He likes to joke around but heâs serious when he has to be,â says Ms. Murphy, from Saint John, N.B.
âAnd anyway,â she adds with a laugh. âItâs been fun to hear him say, âOK, take it from âIâm up on him, he up on me.ââ