Leading Sacred Harp music

The Sacred Harp musical tradition is unusual in choral music in that the task of leading it is not delegated to a single expert, but is rotated among participants. A number of customs related to leading can be traced to this democratic, non-specialist tradition.

Choosing the leader

In a singing convention (that is, a full-scale, usually annual gathering of singers), the forms of parliamentary procedure are adhered to, usually in an informal way that uses little time. The convention is presided over by a chair, and there are committees, resolutions, and so on. Among the committees is an arranging committee, whose task is described in the "Rudiments" section of The Sacred Harp[1] as follows: it "identifies leaders and calls on them to lead, often giving notice to the next leader as well." In modern times, arranging committees distribute the task of leading widely among the singers, so that in all but the largest conventions, everyone who wishes to lead gets a chance; see below for historical practice.

In smaller singings outside the context of conventions, a variety of ways of choosing the leader are found, for instance, rotating through the group in fixed order or spontaneous volunteering. Leading is not required.

The leader's choice of song

Traditionally, a particular leader's appearance is called a "lesson".[2] The leader chooses the song or songs that will be sung in the lesson. They are chosen from the edition of The Sacred Harp that is being used at the singing. Most often this is either the "Denson edition" or the "Cooper edition" (for discussion of editions, see Sacred Harp). They offer a choice of 557 and 599 songs, respectively.[3]

In a lesson, leaders may be permitted to lead just one song, or sometimes two or three.[4] Sacred Harp scholar Buell Cobb asserts that according to "purist" taste, in a lesson consisting of two songs, both should be major or both minor.[5] A more strictly adhered-to rule is that no song may be called twice in the same day; leaders who mistakenly call a song already sung are told that the song has been "used", and must pick another.

Leaders choose songs for many reasons: personal taste, a sense that the song would fit well with the time of day it is called, a wish to acquaint other singers with a seldom-called song, a connection between a song and a deceased or sick relative, and so on.

To "call" a song, a leader announces its page number in a loud voice. The phrase "on the top" or "on the bottom" is added for songs appearing two to a page.

The method of leading

The hollow-square seating arrangement for Sacred Harp singing

Sacred Harp singers sit in a hollow square, with rows of seating for each section surrounding a fairly small central open area. The leader stands in this area, facing the tenors.

Sacred Harp leaders do not use a baton, nor do they use the fairly elaborate motions that symphony and choral conductors use to mark the beat. Instead, a smooth down-and-up motion is preferred, most often made with the open hand. Most lead with one hand, while the other holds the book.[6] Expert leaders may lead without a book, enabling them to use both hands if desired.

The motions of the leading hand reflect the seven "modes of time" as follows. In the Common time modes (2/4, 2/2), the hand falls on the downbeat and rises on the upbeat. In triple time (3/2, 3/4) the hand falls part of the way down[7] on the first beat, the rest of the way down on the second, and rises on the third. The modes of Compound time 6/8 and 6/4 are treated much like Common time, with the hand falling in the first half of the measure and rising on the last half.

4/4 time is likewise normally treated as a binary rhythm, with the hand falling on the first and second beats and rising on the third and fourth. In the original editions of The Sacred Harp, supervised by B. F. White, this was specified as the only way to lead a 4/4 song.[8] However, today some leaders occasionally adopt a four-beat pattern for leading 4/4 songs, especially in slow rhythm: the hand moves down, left, right, and up on the four beats.[9]

Each mode of time is associated with a traditional tempo or range of tempi specified in older editions of The Sacred Harp, though this may be modified by regional practice, the presence of affective markings in the score, or the personal preference of the leader; leaders differ in their ability to get the group to adopt an unusual tempo. Cobb suggests that the choice of tempo can be contentious: "As a rule, Sacred Harpers get by with little bickering, but they admit that the question of tempo has been an irritant for several decades."[10]

Leaders often turn the body or gesture with the hand toward a particular section when it makes a musical entrance. This is particularly useful at repeat signs. In a fuging tune, the leader often turns toward each section as it enters.[11]

Leaders normally sing the tenor part while leading, no matter what section they normally occupy; this matches the part of the singers they are directly facing.[12]

When the leader's turn ("lesson") is over, she simply returns to her seat. Sacred Harp singers do not applaud after songs.

Assistance in leading from the singers

It is customary for some of the singers to duplicate the motions of the leader's hand, while remaining in their seats. This makes the beat visible to the alto section, to whom the leader's back is turned, and sometimes to other singers as well. This kind of assistance in leading is most often carried out by tenor singers seated on the front bench, who have the best view, and for this reason this spot is often occupied by especially competent singers.[13] The support in leading by front-bench tenors also sometimes serves to keep the group together when the leader is a novice.[14]

Sources of error

Sometimes singings experience moments where good ensemble is lost, or even the occasional total breakdown. These normally occur at specific moments:

Style in leading

The 1991 "Rudiments" discourage flamboyance in leading:

Although leaders may assume considerable discretion in the manner of marking time, modest downward and upward strokes are much to be preferred to "winding", "grabbing", and "snatching" methods.

The teachers at a major singing school for Sacred Harp, Camp Fasola, likewise urge their students not to engage in flamboyant leading (see External Links, below). The prohibition on flamboyant leading evidently has a very long history; the 1869 edition of The Sacred Harp recommended that in leading "all affectation be banished".[11]

Such prohibitions have never been entirely successful, and actual singings in fact involve a great variety of less-discreet leading styles. These include dramatic hand motions, two-handed leading (that is, from memory without the book),[15] and various forms of whole-body movement. Strolling around the central area is not uncommon, particularly when the leader is bringing in the various entrances of a fuging tune from each section in succession.[16]

History

Although the privilege of leading is currently extended by and large to anyone who wishes to lead, this was not always so. Around the turn of the 20th century, leading was normally assigned to a small group of experienced singers.[17] This earlier practice explains the traditional terminology whereby a turn of leading is called a "lesson" and the group of singers a "class." Earlier leaders, being experts who wielded authority, would have been in a position actually to instruct the group, as respected senior leaders will sometimes do even today.

Leading by women

Earlier leading differed from the present day in that women were not allowed to serve. According to the web site of the Sacred Harp Musical Heritage Association,[18] the extension of leading to women took place gradually, through the generation that followed the introduction of new editions early in the twentieth century, hence roughly in the historical period when women in America won the right to vote.

Notes

  1. 1991 "Denson" edition, p. 25
  2. Cobb, p. 10
  3. Source: http://resources.texasfasola.org/tunecomparisonindex.html
  4. 1991 rudiments, p. 25
  5. Cobb, p. 11
  6. The use of a music stand would be extremely unusual; Miller (2004; 277).
  7. "Near horizontal", according to the 1991 "Rudiments", p. 16
  8. Cobb, p. 48
  9. Cobb, p. 48, indicates that the regions that favor four-beat leading for 4/4 songs are "Mississippi and a few areas of north Alabama and north Georgia."
  10. Cobb, p. 49. For discussion of tempo variation and its story, see Cobb, p. 49-51.
  11. 1 2 Cobb, p. 12
  12. Singing tenor is recommended for leaders by (for instance) singing masters David Ivey and Jeff Sheppard, teaching at Camp Fasola ()
  13. Cobb, p. 143
  14. See, for instance, Carlton (2003, 51), who relates his own experience as a novice leader.
  15. Cobb, p. 13
  16. Cobb, p. 12.
  17. Cobb, p. 142. Miller (2002, 162) reprints the full list of leaders for 1880 meeting of the Chattahoochee Musical Convention; they number 20 in total, hence only five per day.
  18. "fasola.org"; the specific page is .

References

External links

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