User:Eva Toller: Difference between revisions

From ChoralWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
'''Number of scores on CPDL:''' 175
'''Number of scores on CPDL:''' 175


[[Special:Whatlinkshere/User:Eva Toller|'''List scores by this editor''']]
{{EditionsLink}}


==Contact Information==
==Contact Information==


'''E-mail:''' [mailto:eva.toller@swipnet.se eva.toller@swipnet.se]
'''E-mail:''' [mailto:eva.b.toller@gmail.com eva.b.toller@gmail.com]


'''Website:''' [http://www.evatoller.pp.se/]
'''Website:''' http://www.evatoller.se/main.html


==Education==
==Education==
Line 17: Line 17:
==Background==
==Background==


By occupation, I am a computer consultant (born in 1959). Music has been a hobby for most of my life; I seriously started making choral arrangements in spring 2000 (and have not been able to stop since then :-).*******Västgöta nations damkör</a>). <br /><br /> I was earlier a graduate student in the cross-area between <a href=http://www.csd.uu.se/~udbl/publ/resrep_2000_3.pdf target=_blank> databases and music</a> and am still interested in computer-represented music.
About my country:
I am a Swede, living in Sweden. We are a very small country (as are also our Nordic neighbours) and our
language is spoken by relatively few people. Thus, we tend to learn, speak, and write English quite well,
since we cannot make ourselves understood otherwise. (However, we usually can understand - and be
understood - by Danes and Norwegians, and many Finns also understand some Swedish).  
To find out more about Sweden, the best way is probably to visit:
 
http://www.sweden.se/
 
Choral-wise, Sweden has quite a strong tradition. It started with men's university choirs in the early 19th
century. The most common choir type nowadays is the mixed choir; women's choirs are still more unusual than
other choir types.
 
About me:
I frequently arrange any types of songs that I like and have specific ideas about. The ideas come in
several ways. I may be inspired by the melody or the lyrics; I may think of a certain theme in the song,
that I want to elaborate. I may want to make variations of the lyrics or arrange the song in a new way
stylistically - for example, make jazz of a folk song.
 
Another motivation I have, especially for making arrangements for women's choir, is that it is often very
hard to find a capella arrangements for this type of choir.
 
Personally, I dislike the "primadonna trend" among composers and conductors. I think the attention should
be primarily on the music - it will still be there after the composers are dead and (in many cases)
forgotten. I am the servant of the music, not the other way around. Thus, I have a little difficulty with
giving detailed biographical information about myself (I don't think my life would be very interesting
for others to read about, and I don't want to become a "celebrity", although I'm of course happy when my
music is sung and appreciated).
 
My musical background:
In the municipal music school, I studied piano, recorder, and violin (somewhat). I have kept playing the piano,
and teached myself to play the guitar (mostly chord playing as accompanient to song, but also some "finger play").
 
When I was around 25 years old, I started to take singing lessons, and did that for approximately seven years
(with frequent breaks for a year or a half each). About the same time, I started to sing in a women's choir for
students. I have sung in women's and mixed choirs since then (also here with some breaks), both in church choirs
and secular choirs.
 
Concerning my knowledge in arranging choral music: I am mostly an auto-didact (my formal education is short:
half a semester of basic music theory at the university). I try to transform the practical knowledge I get
as a choral singer to arrangements that are (hopefully!) fun to sing.


[[Category:CPDL Editors|Toller, Eva|]]
[[Category:CPDL Editors|Toller, Eva|]]

Latest revision as of 19:17, 10 December 2020

General Information

Contributor since: 2000-11-27

Number of scores on CPDL: 175

Works with editions by this editor: 185 (see list)

Contact Information

E-mail: eva.b.toller@gmail.com

Website: http://www.evatoller.se/main.html

Education

Background

About my country: I am a Swede, living in Sweden. We are a very small country (as are also our Nordic neighbours) and our language is spoken by relatively few people. Thus, we tend to learn, speak, and write English quite well, since we cannot make ourselves understood otherwise. (However, we usually can understand - and be understood - by Danes and Norwegians, and many Finns also understand some Swedish).

To find out more about Sweden, the best way is probably to visit:

http://www.sweden.se/

Choral-wise, Sweden has quite a strong tradition. It started with men's university choirs in the early 19th century. The most common choir type nowadays is the mixed choir; women's choirs are still more unusual than other choir types.

About me: I frequently arrange any types of songs that I like and have specific ideas about. The ideas come in several ways. I may be inspired by the melody or the lyrics; I may think of a certain theme in the song, that I want to elaborate. I may want to make variations of the lyrics or arrange the song in a new way stylistically - for example, make jazz of a folk song.

Another motivation I have, especially for making arrangements for women's choir, is that it is often very hard to find a capella arrangements for this type of choir.

Personally, I dislike the "primadonna trend" among composers and conductors. I think the attention should be primarily on the music - it will still be there after the composers are dead and (in many cases) forgotten. I am the servant of the music, not the other way around. Thus, I have a little difficulty with giving detailed biographical information about myself (I don't think my life would be very interesting for others to read about, and I don't want to become a "celebrity", although I'm of course happy when my music is sung and appreciated).

My musical background: In the municipal music school, I studied piano, recorder, and violin (somewhat). I have kept playing the piano, and teached myself to play the guitar (mostly chord playing as accompanient to song, but also some "finger play").

When I was around 25 years old, I started to take singing lessons, and did that for approximately seven years (with frequent breaks for a year or a half each). About the same time, I started to sing in a women's choir for students. I have sung in women's and mixed choirs since then (also here with some breaks), both in church choirs and secular choirs.

Concerning my knowledge in arranging choral music: I am mostly an auto-didact (my formal education is short: half a semester of basic music theory at the university). I try to transform the practical knowledge I get as a choral singer to arrangements that are (hopefully!) fun to sing.