Anonymous wrote:I think it is a status signal. It seems to be a thing at schools with money like SLACs. I can't recall if we had ones at my Midwestern state school in the 90s. Though we did have an excellent choir.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is a status signal. It seems to be a thing at schools with money like SLACs. I can't recall if we had ones at my Midwestern state school in the 90s. Though we did have an excellent choir.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tons of a capella groups at Penn in the 90s as well. John Stephens (aka John Legend) was a classmate in one of them before he made it big after college. All different musical styles, parody groups. They were a big part of the campus traditions and entertainment.
Penn Masala...
Mostly CS and pre-med kids singing Bollywood + American Pop.
That's fine for YouTube but it's not the same when the singing is professionally recorded in a studio. The real talent shows when they perform on a stage and sound that good.
Anonymous wrote:Because it's fun and builds community. Making music together is good for the soul.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was a popular movie a few years ago that inspired a bunch of these clubs.
It's the other way around. The rise in popularity of university a cappella clubs inspired the Pitch Perfect movies. Some of these groups are over a century old, e.g. Yale's Whiffenpoofs (1909). It's a very competitive field and it's easily as time consuming as playing a sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tons of a capella groups at Penn in the 90s as well. John Stephens (aka John Legend) was a classmate in one of them before he made it big after college. All different musical styles, parody groups. They were a big part of the campus traditions and entertainment.
Penn Masala...
Mostly CS and pre-med kids singing Bollywood + American Pop.
Anonymous wrote:There was a popular movie a few years ago that inspired a bunch of these clubs.