In the late 1960s, Robert Cooper was 14 and living in
Mr. Cooper, now 62, continued to follow this engrained passion for choir music, which he traces back to that moment, and is currently the Artistic Director of Chorus Niagara, the Orpheus Choir of Toronto, the Opera in Concert Chorus, and the Faculty of Music Women’s Chorus, University of Toronto; additionally he teaches when the opportunity presents itself, presents at conferences like the 33rd Annual Chorus America Conference last week, and guest conducts a variety of choirs on the side. He accomplishes this all, while making time for his wife, a school principal, and his two sons, 21 and 25.
While Robert lived in
He didn’t get any formal training until high school, where he performed in a variety of high school musicals. A performer at heart with a passion for his art, Robert continued his education and received a Bachelor and Master degree in music at the
“When I look back, I knew I had some kind of innate raw talent,” he explains. “I had a talent and I had a way to be just… larger than life, but it was all unfocused. University gave me more discipline, a little more humility, and a greater depth of understanding of what our culture is. So I could bring more to what I’m doing and not be all surface-y and flash and dash.”
But practical experience was also necessary to get Robert to where he is today. He went to
It was Bob and Joe Henderson, friends of Robert’s and singers in the Niagara Symphony Chorus, who invited Robert to lead their choir through their transition. At the time, there were only 42 people in the chorus and it took four to five years to turn the group around. Today they’re called Chorus Niagara and they’re a full-fledged arts organization with over 100 members, a concert series, a board of directors, a budget that is well over a quarter of a million dollars, and a children and youth choir component.
As artistic director it’s Robert’s job to provide artistic leadership, programming ideas, and creative impetus to the group, while pushing them to reach their musical ambitions. And Robert has his share of musical ambitions for the group. In the short term, he wants to see his chorus singing at the new art centre that is being built in
He also wants to challenge the audience to reach new levels of appreciation for his music. He recalls, “In one performance we did a work that was quite complicated. And I said to the audience, ‘You know what? I’m not going to tell you to sit back and enjoy. I don’t necessarily want you to enjoy it. But I want you to be touched by it. I want you to be poked by it… prodded by it. I want you to close your eyes and listen to it. Just let the music seep into your pores and see what effect it has.”
He seems to always come back to this; the importance that the people and the music play. He explains that the real satisfaction is working with the 18 to 80 year-olds that make up his choir.
“When you leave you feel like you’ve touched people,” he explains, “and they’ve touched you and you’ve come together in a collaborative situation all because of the music; that uniting spirit that the music brings to the rehearsal.”
Last year, Robert brought Chorus Niagara on their first international tour. While in
No comments:
Post a Comment