I sing in a semi-professional chamber choir, and my solution to this is
that I put the music in the BrailleNote and use it in rehearsals; that
way I can edit the file--that crescendo in measure eight; that half rest
that we want to be a dotted quarter rest. When I have put in all the
edits, I send the file to my Braille Blazer, so that when concert time
comes, I have a binder full of hard copy. For church choir I often just
use the BrailleNote on Sunday mornings, but we stand in the back of the
church and I can use a music stand if I really need to. There are
advantages to both. For giving a speech I'd be comfortable just using
the BrailleNote. But I think it's a personal thing.

Susie


Susie Stageberg
Project ASSIST with Windows
Iowa Department for the Blind
(515) 281-1351 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sherry
Gomes
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2005 8:12 AM
To: 'Braillenote List'
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Braillenote or hard copy


Actually, i suggest a much lower tech option.  this is how i've handled
every choir i've been in.  i take a tape recorder to rehearsals, sit by
a person I know who knows the part, depending on what part I sing.  I
ask the pianist to play the notes if I don't hear it.  I'll ask someone
to tell me the words, if the choir isn't singing clearly.  then I go
home and practice with that tape.  i memorize everything and don't have
to have anything on stage but me and my dog.  the thing is that for many
years, I was part of a choir that did a lot of choreography, sometimes
just hand motions, but for special presentations, there were dancing, or
just some side stepping, moving to different positions on stage, on and
off and back again, interacting dramatically to the lyrics, holding lit
candles or using other props in black light numbers.  i could not have
held a braille note or paper and then also been able to participate in
these parts of the performance. if you're in a choir where everyone
holds music, then it makes sense to have your, either hard copy or BN.
But if you can memorize it, it really frees you up on stage.

Sherry


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of CATNIP
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2005 5:52 AM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] Braillenote or hard copy


My husband and I have been trying to figure out how I could use the BN
in choir.  It sure would be nice to just hit that thumb key and advance
to the next line of the song.  It would just be the standing there
holding it that would be the problem.  LOL.  So I'm still brailling out
the words to all the choir music on my Perkins and having the sheets in
a folder.Any suggestions?


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