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Vocal jazz choirs joined by CU Buffoons March 4

vocal jazz choir rehearsing

Members of the Vocal Jazz Company rehearse in the choir room at Macky Auditorium

On March 4, the CU choirs are out to prove that theyā€™re about more than just traditional hymns and large-scale classical works.

The CU Vocal Companyā€”the collective name of two small ensembles of mostly non-music majors focusing on tight harmonies and a varied repertoire of 20th-century hitsā€”will present a concert of jazz tunes to get late-winter toes tapping. Joining the group on the Grusin Music Hall stage will be none other than student-run a cappella group the .

In a place like Boulderā€”already with its own dedicated and enthusiastic jazz audienceā€”itā€™ll be yet another style for audiences to sink their teeth into.

ā€œWe have people who regularly come to choir concerts, and the Buffoons will invite people from their following,ā€ says choral studies doctoral student Brian Stone. ā€œThe melding of the two groups will be a different experience for everyone.ā€

Stone leads the 10-member mixed ensemble performing on the program. He was here for the rebirth of vocal jazz at the College of Music about five years ago.

ā€œWhen I came to CU for my masterā€™s in 2008, the vocal jazz programā€”which had been around off and on since the 70sā€”was defunct. But then when I started my doctorate last year, Dr. Gentry asked if I would be a part of continuing what [alumnus] Paul Thompson had started a few years earlier.ā€

Now Stone, in the second year of his DMA, gets to expand on a personal interest in jazzā€”honed during his years as an undergraduate student at the University of Puget Soundā€”during his doctoral studies.

ā€œWhen I went to college, I found myself seeking out leadership positions in choral groups. I led the vocal jazz group at UPS, and when the opportunity arose to do something similar here, it felt natural to take it.ā€

Stone will direct the ensemble in Paul Simonā€™s ā€œYou Can Call Me Alā€ and piano giant Gene Perlingā€™s arrangement of the standard ā€œThe Shadow of Your Smile.ā€

Masterā€™s student Liz Olson leads a womenā€™s ensemble in the March concert. Her group is tackling such timeless works as ā€œCry Me a Riverā€ and the Van Morrison fan-favorite ā€œMoondance.ā€ She says the challenging pieces have proven rewarding, both for her and for the 10 members of her group.

ā€œWeā€™re going to be able to showcase individual voices, some solos and some scatting, so all the members of the ensemble will be able to shine individually and as a group,ā€ she explains.

Olson, who came to Boulder all the way from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and also sang in a jazz choir in undergrad, says students benefit just as much as audiences from an exploration of different genres.

ā€œA lot of students arenā€™t familiar with this kind of music. There are so many different kinds of choirs, and itā€™s important to be exposed to a variety of styles.ā€

ā€œVocal jazz takes individual work and work as a group to really focus in and listen to each other,ā€ Stone adds. ā€œThereā€™s always a lot involved in maintaining a healthy voice and full vocal technique when singing in a group. Because of the tight harmonies, vocal jazz heightens that.ā€

The concert wraps up in grand fashion, with the all-male CU Buffoons joining the CU Vocal Company and a small rhythm combo for a performance of ā€œSoul with a Capital ā€˜S,ā€™ā€ arranged by University of Northern Colorado jazz artist Kerry Marsh.

ā€œThe piece is really funky,ā€ says Stone. ā€œAnd the rhythm section has the style down. The CU Buffoons are an a cappella group, so itā€™ll be fun to bring them together with a few instrumentalists.ā€

And the goal is to bring audience members together, too.

ā€œSomething that often attracts audiences to choral concerts is the sound of the voices singing in harmony. Whether they come from a jazz background, a choral background or an a cappella background, the vocal jazz ensemblesā€™ sound combines all these genres,ā€ Stone says.

The Vocal Jazz Choirs concert is Sunday, March 4, at 2 p.m. in Grusin Music Hall. For more information, visit .