Crowd-Sourced Virtual Choir Unites on YouTube

Thousands of voices unite in global virtual choir.
Amelia Walkley
Published on April 07, 2011

I've sung in lots of choirs in my time. The Australian Youth Choir, for example (is it just me, or was that just so incredibly nineties?) My high school choir, the NSW School's Spectacular combined choir, the Newtown Community Choir, to name a few more. Sure, singing in choirs is one of the many nerdy things I have done in my life so far. But there's nothing quite like the buzz you get from uniting together with other singers as one voice. It gets me through my one obligatory visit to church at Christmas time: I'm a carol-singing tragic.

Composer Eric Whitacre believes singing in unison to be a fundamental part of human experience. His Virtual Choir project uses technology to bring people together from around the globe to sing his compositions. The first experiment in 2010 saw 185 singers from 12 countries posting videos of themselves to YouTube singing one of the 4-part harmonies from Whitacre's piece Lux Arumque. Whitacre had previously uploaded a video of himself conducting the piece in silence which participants could watch as they sang their parts.

The next installment of the project is a performance of Whitacre's Sleep, and is set to be unveiled on April 7 2011. The choir has increased 100 fold, with over 2000 voices from 58 different countries now taking part. Part of the beauty of it all is the prospect of so many individuals alone at their computer screens, who are nevertheless together as part of a bigger picture, sound and purpose.

[Via TedEX]

Published on April 07, 2011 by Amelia Walkley
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