Layne and I had a great V-day weekend. We had planned to go skiing all day Saturday but it was snowing way too hard all day. We wouldn't have been able to make it up the mountain in our car so we bagged it. Ironic isn't it? Snowed out of a ski trip. We did however have tickets to the Utah Symphony that night featuring one of my favorite a cappella groups The King's Singers. Six Grammy-winning British blokes who bring the house down everywhere they go! I have been looking forward to this concert for a long time and it certainly didn't disappoint! The set list for the evening was as follows:Kings Singers set "From the Movies"
Kokomo
It Had to Be You (with symphony)
Kiss From a Rose
Groovy Kind of Love
Circle of Life (with symphony)
Intermission
Symphony played another piece by Strauss
Kings Singers set "Folk Songs"
Rosie (Irish)
Greensleeves
Jack the Jolly Tar (Irish)
The Turtle Dove
Aiken Drum (Scottish - with symphony)
Symphony played Schnell Polka by Strauss
Kings Singers set "Beatles"
Let it Be (with symphony)
Black Bird
Honey Pie
Hey Jude (with symphony)
All You Need is Love
1st Encore: Yellow Submarine
2nd Encore: O bla di
My favorites were Kokomo, Kiss from a Rose, Groovy Kind of Love, Greensleeves, Black Bird and Ob-la-di. If I had to pick one favorite it was their stunning arrangement of Greensleeves. After the concert we were in the lobby chatting with some friends that we ran into when the singers came out to greet fans and sign cds and programs. I ran into David Hurley the highest of the two counter-tenors (aka the cherub faced man). He signed my program and Layne took our picture. It was a wonderful evening!

Poor Layne had to go to work on Monday but being President's Day I got to sleep in and enjoy Monday off. I spent the afternoon with my friend Kiersten.
Tuesday I got a surprise in the mail. First let me give a little background. Ever heard of CafePress? It is the leader in online user-generated commerce. In a nutshell they sell T-Shirts, apparel, gifts, mugs, stationery, gear, and other stuff that gets printed on, but they don't design any of it. Users can create free accounts and become their own "shopkeeper". As a shopkeeper you upload your own work or art and select which items you'd like to be made available for purchase in your shop with your artwork on it. Then every time a shirt or a mug or anything from your shop sells, you get a portion (albeit small) of the profit. So I was looking online for a gag gift t-shirt for a friend several months ago with a particular nerdy phrase on it. I did a google search and found some things that were close but not exactly what I was looking for. So, I decided that using cafepress and opening my own free shop, I could design it exactly how I wanted it. That was my motivation to opening a shop. I designed my shirt and while I was at it I uploaded a couple other designs and opened my shop. I never expected anyone ELSE to buy anything. Months went by and I forgot all about my cafepress account. Well, Tuesday I got an envelope in the mail from cafepress. I assumed it would be some kind of junk mail, but to my surprise I opened it to find a comission check for $450!! Apparently, people have been buying stuff with my designs! Over $4,000 worth of merch! Pretty crazy!Another busy weekend the 20th-21st. Friday night we had a dress rehearsal for the Te Deum which I didn't get out of until like 11:30 at which point I went over to the house of one of my YW for her 17th birthday party/sleepover. While I didn't sleep over, I did stay till 3:30am! I haven't stayed up that late since...well, a long time. Layne and I went skiing at Snowbird that next day so you can imagine how pooped I was by the time the concert came around that evening. It went really, really well though and we had a lot of fun. The audience's reception of the piece was wonderful and the reviews were great!
"Musical artists join forces for 'stunning' effect" - Salt Lake Tribune
"Choral groups offer magical performance" - Deseret News
Here's a video of one of the pieces Singers performed on the concert called Pange Lingua.
The next Thursday and Friday we had the privilege of having New York composer Nancy Wertsch visiting to work with us before the world premiere of a piece we commissioned her to write for us that weekend. Thursday night we sang for another high school invitational, but Friday most of the day I spent working on a side project I had taken on with a friend of mine who films and edits all of our concerts. We decided to do a piece on the new commission. Friday I spent a lot of time interviewing Mrs. Wertsch, Dr. Allred and several students for this project which Dave just finished the final edits on. It was my first experience with broadcast journalism and I must say, I'm hooked! Katie Couric needs to watch her back... I think it turned out very nice so instead of writing about the experience, I'll let you watch!
The concert that Saturday night was great and the world premiere of Nancy's piece was received with a standing ovation. It is very exciting to get to work with composers and be a part of the creative process and be the vehicle by which someone's art takes shape and is presented to the community. We would have had it memorized but she was making changes to it right up until the day of the concert! Here is the world premiere video and a video of another piece we debuted that evening:
Hail Holy Light
Jubilate Deo
That next Monday night (March 2nd) was the Singers benefit concert "It's Time to Pop!". Members of the ensemble were asked to prepare pop songs throughout the decades to perform while the audience was treated to deserts donated from all sorts of local bakerys in an effort to raise money for the choir. I was asked VERY last minute to be a group with 2 other girls to sing "Wishin' and Hopin'" first performed by Dionne Warwick in the early 60's. I learned the music the day before, got my "outfit" that afternoon and learned the choreography in the bathroom half an hour before sound check. I was nervous for sure, and we had a packed house. About one verse into the song, my hideous black 60's wig slipped off and at that point the song turned into a comedy routine of me trying to continue to sing and dance while keeping my hair on. I was thoroughly embarrassed, but everyone was laughing so I guess as long as people were having a good time, then mission accomplished! The evening was a big success. Here are a couple pictures of the evening.


That Friday afternoon, the Singers and other vocal students from the U were invited to attend a workshop put on by the amazing Bobby McFerrin who I have loved since I was a kid! Here is the news clip about it. If you can pick out the back of my head in any of these shots you get 50 points! ;) The workshop was a blast and I got to shake his hand afterward and he signed the CD I've had for years. He's an amazing musician and just a super nice guy.
We had stake conference that weekend which I always enjoy. This past week were 2 more performances for the U's Fine Arts concert and the SLCA Chamber Singers performed a whole concert full of music by LDS composer David Naylor who writes ward choir music. We'll be recording it all in a couple weeks. And we're up to speed again!





































