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In isolation I’m sure they could, but the stop/starting in the Mass, often not having time/facilities for a proper warm up prior to Mass etc.I think this is trying to be “too” cautious. I mean, we aren’t talking about having a nine year old throwing curve balls at full throttle. Admittedly, some choir directors try to get more out of the adult voices than they are capable of. If the choristers knew anything (and weren’t so proud as to think that they are better than they really are), they’d object. For typical songs, a child should be able to sing along quite competently, however. Especially if the congregation is expected to sing with the choir on most selections.
As to warm ups and techniques, just start with such at any choir rehearsal. It likely ought to be done, anyway. No, one can’t assure that ANY vocalist (youth or adult) will warm up properly on their own time. But using such as an excuse to not have children as part of a choir is a cheap excuse. Maybe the choir director doesn’t want to have to deal with kids and discipline. Or he doesn’t want to work. if this is the case, then he should outright get fired as he probably isn’t good for the choir or music program as a whole.
It would be incredibly difficult for a choir director to be aware of what each child was doing during the rehearsal, and whether they were producing the sound properly, had the correct support etc.
True, but for the most part you can leave it up to the adults themselves in a way you can’t do with children.
Yes maybe they don’t. Or maybe it’s a Diocesan child protection policy. But I don’t think we should be making negative assumptions about it when there are perfectly plausible and indeed well founded grounds for adopting such a policy for the child’s own good.
This goes back to what I said about it being slightly different for the U.S… You expect not just a choir but a music program and people to have been hired to take on that responsibility. In the Parish I go to all of the people who work with the choir are volunteers and that places certain limitations on what can be accomplished. Someone may know enough about music to sing with proper technique and conduct/lead well, but that doesn’t mean they are able to teach others to sing or have the confidence to try teaching children. They need to be allowed to work to their own limitations and if that means not taking anyone under a certain age/without prior training its surely better to allow them to do so than not have a choir at all.
Regarding Scooby’s point on boys’ choirs. Do you have any idea how much training those choristers have done before they even come close to joining a boys’ choir?